Investment Passport

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Investment Passport CHERNIVTSI REGIONAL STATE ADMINISTRATION INVESTMENT PASSPORT SELYATYN UNITED TERRITORIAL COMMUNITY 2018 Investment passport CONTENTS Chapter І. CHARACTERISTICS OF THE TERRITORY 1. General information for investment 2. Geographical and climate conditions 3. Education, healthcare, culture and leisure time activities 4. Workforce 5. Transport infrastructure 6. Structure of the economy 7. Community’s achievements Chapter II. INVESTMENT PROPOSALS 1. Economical priorities and investment proposals 2. Resources for investment activities Chapter III. CONTACTS Selyatyn united territorial community Investment passport Chapter І. CHARACTERICTICS OF THE TERRITORY 1. General information for investment Selyatyn united territorial community is situated in the valley of the river Suceava, in the Putyl`shchyna. First elections : August 14, 2017 United communities: 3 Community center – Selyatyn Square of united territorial community: 117,708 km 2 Starosta (community leader) districts: 2 Population – 4 557 people Selyatyn village – 1 173 people; Halytsivka village – 677 people; Rus`ka village – 474 people. Ploska village – 827 people. Lustun village – 234 people. Shepit village – 683 people. Andrievske village – 101 people. Verhniy Yalovets village – 178 people. Sarata village – 93 people. Nyjniy Yalovets village – 117 people Distance: to oblast center of Chernivtsi – 109 km. To the regional center Putyla – 22 km. Selyatyn united territorial community Investment passport 2. Geographical and climate conditions Selyatyn is the most stormy place in Ukraine. 45 days of the year there are thunderstorms. The climate is moderately continental, mild, damp. The average temperature in January is minus 7.0 ° С, in July - plus 15.0 ° С. The period with a temperature of more than plus 10 ° C is 83 days. The amount of precipitation is 800-1200 mm per year, most of them fall during the warm period of the year. The height of the snow cover is up to 45 cm. It belongs to the Carpathian region of the vertical climate zone. The administrative center of the Selyatyn United Territorial Community is the village of Selyatyn. The largest natural wealth and potential of the Selyatyn UTC are forests. The presence of two automobile checkpoints across the state border of Ukraine on the border with Romania favorably distinguishes Selyatyn UTC from among others. Rus`ka - the checkpoint located near the village of the same name on the road T 2609. From the Romanian side, there is the checkpoint "Ulma" near the village of Ulma, the district of Suceava, on the highway 209G in the direction of the Verhniy Vikova. The checkpoint "Ruska" is part of the "Vadul-Syrets" customs post of the Chernivtsi Regional Customs Office. Selyatyn united territorial community Investment passport Shepit - is a checkpoint across the state border of Ukraine on the border with Romania, located near the village of the same name on a highway of local importance. From the Romanian side, there is a crossing point "Izvoarele- Suceava", the district of Suceava, on the highway 175 in Pozorita. The type of the checkpoint is - pedestrian, local value, the nature of transportation is – passenger’s. The checkpoint "Shepit" can only carry out radiological, customs and border control. The checkpoint "Shepit" is part of the “Vadul-Syrets” customs post of the Chernivtsi Regional Customs Office. Information of the land resources Total area of ​​land (in village councils), ha Ploskovskaya; 662,7 Selyatin; 980,5 Shepitka; 817,6 Selyatyn united territorial community Investment passport 3. Education, healthcare, culture and leisure time activities On the territory of the Selyatyn united territorial community there are: - 3 pre-school educational institutions with 155 children and 50 employees; - 1 educational complex in which 32 children are studying and 5 people work; - 4 general education establishments, where 692 children are studying and 128 people work; - 5 health facilities, with 3 doctors and 11 employees of medical staff; - 5 libraries, employing 6 people; - 4 cultural houses, which employ 8 people. 4. Workforce The territory of the Selyatyn united territorial community is home to 4 557 people. 5. Transport infrastructure Administrative center of UTC - Selyatyn village, which is located 109 km from the regional center of Chernivtsi and 22 km from the district center of the city Putyla. Selyatyn united territorial community Investment passport 6. Structure of the economy On the territory of Selyatyn UTC there are 36 registered legal entities and 142 entrepreneurs. On the territory of the Selyatyn united community, the main branch of activity is logging. 2/3 of the UTC area is occupied by the forest. The State Forestry Enterprise, which has its own forestries in villages. There are 5 forestries on the territory. There they take care of forest crops, felling. There are also forestry entrepreneurs. But they are small. Although many people work with the forest. 7. Community’s achievements At the expense of the joint project of the European Union and the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) "Community Based Approach to Local Development", in the Selyatyn community on June 24, 2015, the Agricultural Service Cooperative "Gifts of Hutsulshchyna" was established. The prerequisites for its creation were the fact that most of the territory of the community is covered in forest areas, where environmentally friendly forest products grow. The absence of arable land does not allow for the cultivating of agricultural crop products, therefore the main activity of the cooperative was the harvesting of forest gifts - department for the processing of mushrooms and berries is located in the village Putyla. The main activities of the cooperative are: • Harvesting, primary processing and marketing of wild mushrooms, berries and herbs. • Gathering and selling of milk, meat. • Freezing, drying mushrooms and berries. • Making phytoteas. • Feed production. • Provision of services in animal husbandry. Selyatyn united territorial community Investment passport • Providing services in crop production. • Sale of white dried mushrooms, grounded, open`ka, lysych`ka, phytoteas. In 2016, the cooperative provided services for the harvesting, processing and re-utilization of 12 tons of white mushrooms in the amount of 222.9 thousand UAH, for the first half of 2017 - 104.2 thousand UAH. In 2017, provision was made for harvesting and drying herbs for phytoteas; In the first half-year, 4 tons of frozen white mushrooms and 2 tons of blanched lysychka were harvested. The agricultural cooperative combines 23 members and has created 4 jobs. Also in 2017 a number of other projects were implemented at the expense of a subvention for the socio-economic development of the territory in the Selyatyn community: • Rebuilding with the insulation of the facade of the sleeping quarters of the "Selyatyn SOS-boarding school of I-III levels". • Purchase of multimedia equipment and computer equipment for Selyatyn DHS. Rebuilding of the roof of the Ploskiv Secondary School I-III levels. Selyatyn united territorial community Investment passport Chapter II. INVESTMENT PROPOSALS 1. Economical priorities and investment proposals 2. Land resources for investment activities Selyatyn united territorial community Investment passport CHAPTER III. CONTACTS Contacts for investors: Selyatyn town council 59131 Chernivtsi oblast Putyla raion (district), village Selyatyn, Ukrains`ka street, 6 Phone number: +38 (03738) 2-33-35 E-mail: [email protected] Selyatyn united territorial community .
Recommended publications
  • Investment Proposal (Project) Application Form of GREENFIЕLD
    Investment proposal (project) application form of GREENFIЕLD land lot General information Title of the investment proposal (project) Construction of the recreational complex «Stanchyna» Location (district, city/village, street), land photo, Bahna vil., Vyzhnytsia district, Chernivtsi region scheme of location Owner (owners) Community of Bahna vil. Available documents, that certify the ownership General plan of construction (official act, certificate of ownership) Preliminary cost (balanced cost, assessed value) 100,0 ths. UAH The actual usage Pasture Technical parameters of a land lot Area of the available land lot, ha 45,4 Border surroundings (description, scheme) Borders on the state forestry Level difference on the land lot, m 50 m Cadastral end use Pasture Proposed end use For construction of touristic and recreational center, skiing track Ground-based obstacles (risk of flood and No obstacles landslide, ecological conditions) Underground obstacles (level of surface and No obstacles subterranean waters) Limitations in use (due to construction, ecology According to the requirements of land ownership etc.) and good-neighborly relations Utilities Water (availability, parameters) Distance to the source of fresh water – 250 m Drainage system (availability, parameters) Not available Supplying with gas (availability, parameters) Distance to the gas supplying net – 3,1 km. Electricity (availability, parameters) Distance to the available electrical substation -1 km Availability Ways of communication to the object (autoroads, Automobile gravel
    [Show full text]
  • Untitled Spreadsheet
    Priority sector for Name of the project in Summary of the project in English, including goal and results (up Full name of the applicant Total project budget Requested amount ID Competition program LOT Type of project culture and arts English to 100 words) organization in English (in UAH) from UCF (in UAH) The television program is based on facts taken from historical sources, which testify to a fundamental distortion of the history of the Russian Empire, aimed at creating a historical mythology that Muscovy and Kievan Rus have common historical roots, that Muscovy has "inheritance rights" on Kievan Rus. The ordinary fraud of the Muscovites, who had taken possession of the past of The cycle of science- the Grand Duchy of Kiev and its people, dealt a terrible cognitive television blow to the Ukrainian ethnic group. Our task is to expose programs "UKRAINE. the falsehood and immorality of Moscow mythology on Union of STATE HISTORY. Part the basis of true facts. Without a great past, it is impossible Cinematographers "Film 3AVS11-0069 Audiovisual Arts LOT 1 TV content Individual Audiovisual Arts I." Kievan Rus " to create a great nation. Logos" 1369589 1369589 New eight 15-minute programs of the cycle “Game of Fate” are continuation of the project about outstanding historical figures of Ukrainian culture, art and science. The project consists of stories of the epistolary genre and memoirs. Private world of talented personalities, complex and ambiguous, is at the heart of the stories. These are facts from biographies that are not written in textbooks, encyclopedias, or wikipedia, but which are much more likely to attract the attention of different audiences.
    [Show full text]
  • Jewish Cemetries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine
    Syracuse University SURFACE Religion College of Arts and Sciences 2005 Jewish Cemetries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine Samuel D. Gruber United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/rel Part of the Religion Commons Recommended Citation Gruber, Samuel D., "Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine" (2005). Full list of publications from School of Architecture. Paper 94. http://surface.syr.edu/arc/94 This Report is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Arts and Sciences at SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Religion by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. JEWISH CEMETERIES, SYNAGOGUES, AND MASS GRAVE SITES IN UKRAINE United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad 2005 UNITED STATES COMMISSION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF AMERICA’S HERITAGE ABROAD Warren L. Miller, Chairman McLean, VA Members: Ned Bandler August B. Pust Bridgewater, CT Euclid, OH Chaskel Besser Menno Ratzker New York, NY Monsey, NY Amy S. Epstein Harriet Rotter Pinellas Park, FL Bingham Farms, MI Edgar Gluck Lee Seeman Brooklyn, NY Great Neck, NY Phyllis Kaminsky Steven E. Some Potomac, MD Princeton, NJ Zvi Kestenbaum Irving Stolberg Brooklyn, NY New Haven, CT Daniel Lapin Ari Storch Mercer Island, WA Potomac, MD Gary J. Lavine Staff: Fayetteville, NY Jeffrey L. Farrow Michael B. Levy Executive Director Washington, DC Samuel Gruber Rachmiel
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Introduction
    State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre State Scientific Production Enterprise “Kartographia” TOPONYMIC GUIDELINES For map and other editors For international use Ukraine Kyiv “Kartographia” 2011 TOPONYMIC GUIDELINES FOR MAP AND OTHER EDITORS, FOR INTERNATIONAL USE UKRAINE State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre State Scientific Production Enterprise “Kartographia” ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Prepared by Nina Syvak, Valerii Ponomarenko, Olha Khodzinska, Iryna Lakeichuk Scientific Consultant Iryna Rudenko Reviewed by Nataliia Kizilowa Translated by Olha Khodzinska Editor Lesia Veklych ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ © Kartographia, 2011 ISBN 978-966-475-839-7 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Introduction ................................................................ 5 2 The Ukrainian Language............................................ 5 2.1 General Remarks.............................................. 5 2.2 The Ukrainian Alphabet and Romanization of the Ukrainian Alphabet ............................... 6 2.3 Pronunciation of Ukrainian Geographical Names............................................................... 9 2.4 Stress .............................................................. 11 3 Spelling Rules for the Ukrainian Geographical Names....................................................................... 11 4 Spelling of Generic Terms ....................................... 13 5 Place Names in Minority Languages
    [Show full text]
  • Developing the GIS-Based Maps of the Geomorphological and Phytogeographical Division of the Ukrainian Carpathians for Routine Use in Biogeography
    Biogeographia – The Journal of Integrative Biogeography 36 (2021): a009 https://doi.org/10.21426/B636052326 Developing the GIS-based maps of the geomorphological and phytogeographical division of the Ukrainian Carpathians for routine use in biogeography ANDRIY NOVIKOV Department of Biosystematics and Evolution of the State Natural History Museum of the NAS of Ukraine, Teatralna str. 18, 79008 Lviv (Ukraine) email: [email protected] Keywords: biogeography, mesoregional division, shapefile, Ukrainian Carpathians. SUMMARY The paper introduces GIS-based maps of the geomorphological and phytogeographical division of the Ukrainian Carpathians (a part of Eastern Carpathian Mts.), which were developed for routine use in biogeography and based on the consolidation of the existing publications. The map of the geomorphological division includes 57 OGUs (operational geographic units), and the map of the phytogeographical division – 18 OGUs of the lowest rank. Geomorphological units are supported with available synonyms, which should help in work with different topic-related Ukrainian publications. Both maps follow strict hierarchical classification and are briefly discussed. INTRODUCTION Tsys (1962, 1968) published the first The Ukrainian Carpathians (UC) is part of the complete geomorphologic division of the UC. Eastern Carpathian mountain province Besides five mountainous regions, this division (Kondracki 1989), artificially delimited by the also included adjacent foothills and lowlands western border of Ukraine and covering about (Ciscarpathia and Transcarpathia) and 24,000 km2. In general, these are not high comprised 36 districts. Such regionalization of mountains – only seven peaks of the UC the UC was further developed by many slightly exceed 2000 m of elevation, and all Ukrainian scientists (Herenchuk 1968, these peaks, including the highest point of Marynych et al.
    [Show full text]
  • Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine
    JEWISH CEMETERIES, SYNAGOGUES, AND MASS GRAVE SITES IN UKRAINE United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad 2005 UNITED STATES COMMISSION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF AMERICA’S HERITAGE ABROAD Warren L. Miller, Chairman McLean, VA Members: Ned Bandler August B. Pust Bridgewater, CT Euclid, OH Chaskel Besser Menno Ratzker New York, NY Monsey, NY Amy S. Epstein Harriet Rotter Pinellas Park, FL Bingham Farms, MI Edgar Gluck Lee Seeman Brooklyn, NY Great Neck, NY Phyllis Kaminsky Steven E. Some Potomac, MD Princeton, NJ Zvi Kestenbaum Irving Stolberg Brooklyn, NY New Haven, CT Daniel Lapin Ari Storch Mercer Island, WA Potomac, MD Gary J. Lavine Staff: Fayetteville, NY Jeffrey L. Farrow Michael B. Levy Executive Director Washington, DC Samuel Gruber Rachmiel Liberman Research Director Brookline, MA Katrina A. Krzysztofiak Laura Raybin Miller Program Manager Pembroke Pines, FL Patricia Hoglund Vincent Obsitnik Administrative Officer McLean, VA 888 17th Street, N.W., Suite 1160 Washington, DC 20006 Ph: ( 202) 254-3824 Fax: ( 202) 254-3934 E-mail: [email protected] May 30, 2005 Message from the Chairman One of the principal missions that United States law assigns the Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad is to identify and report on cemeteries, monuments, and historic buildings in Central and Eastern Europe associated with the cultural heritage of U.S. citizens, especially endangered sites. The Congress and the President were prompted to establish the Commission because of the special problem faced by Jewish sites in the region: The communities that had once cared for the properties were annihilated during the Holocaust.
    [Show full text]
  • Hutsulshchyna and Public Progress
    BULLETIN OF GEOGRAPHY SOCIO–ECONOMIC SERIES No. 14/2010 ANNA KIBYCH YURIY FEDKOVYCH CHERNIVTSI NATIONAL UNIVERSITY, UKRAINE HUTSULSHCHYNA AND PUBLIC PROGRESS DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10089-010-0013-2 ABSTRACT. The article describes the public-demographic changes in Hutsulshchyna in the light of political and economic surroundings of a changing Ukraine. There are indications proving that structural shifts in Hutsuls’ ethnic culture, caused by cultural globalization, are about to happen. Preservation of ethnographic features in present-day conditions, as well as Hutsuls’ adaptation to new social realities, appears to become a complex socio-cultural problem of this region of Ukraine. KEY WORDS: Ukraine, Hutsulshchyna, geography of culture, ethnic minorities. INTRODUCTION Due to the collapse of the Soviet Union, its former constituent parts became independent states and simultaneously the subjects of a global community of nations. They have been exposed to the political, economic, and cultural influences from the side of the most technologically advanced societies, the wealthiest economies, and, first of all, the expansive culture of mass consumption. The post-Soviet nations have been subjected to the deep transformation processes in the area of ideology and economy. Moreover, their societies gained access to new technologies, various ‘modern’ devices, as well as to some different styles of thinking and ways of life. Ideological and political transformation was then accompanied by cultural changes, which can lead to the loss of some traditional characteristics and the reduction in the area of cultural diversity. This is the reason that the changes in the area of culture among the post-Soviet societies became the object of interest on the part of scientists, including geographers.
    [Show full text]
  • Meeting Places and Social Capital Supporting Rural Landscape Stewardship: a Pan-European Horizon Scanning
    Copyright © 2021 by the author(s). Published here under license by the Resilience Alliance. Angelstam, P., M. Fedoriak, F. Cruz, J. Muñoz-Rojas, T. Yamelynets, M. Manton, C.-L. Washbourne, D. Dobrynin, Z. Izakovičova, N. Jansson, B. Jaroszewicz, R. Kanka, M. Kavtarishvili, L. Kopperoinen, M. Lazdinis, M. J. Metzger, D. Özüt, D. Pavloska Gjorgjieska, F. J. Sijtsma, N. Stryamets, A. Tolunay, T. Turkoglu, B. Van der Moolen, A. Zagidullina, and A. Zhuk. 2021. Meeting places and social capital supporting rural landscape stewardship: A Pan-European horizon scanning. Ecology and Society 26(1):11. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-12110-260111 Research Meeting places and social capital supporting rural landscape stewardship: A Pan-European horizon scanning Per Angelstam 1, Mariia Fedoriak 2, Fatima Cruz 3, José Muñoz-Rojas 4, Taras Yamelynets 5, Michael Manton 6, Carla-Leanne Washbourne 7, Denis Dobrynin 8, Zita Izakovičova 9, Nicklas Jansson 10, Bogdan Jaroszewicz 11, Robert Kanka 9, Marika Kavtarishvili 12, Leena Kopperoinen 13, Marius Lazdinis 14, Marc J. Metzger 15, Deniz Özüt 16, Dori Pavloska Gjorgjieska 17, Frans J. Sijtsma 18, Nataliya Stryamets 19,20, Ahmet Tolunay 21, Turkay Turkoglu 22, Bert van der Moolen 23, Asiya Zagidullina 24 and Alina Zhuk 25 ABSTRACT. Achieving sustainable development as an inclusive societal process in rural landscapes, and sustainability in terms of functional green infrastructures for biodiversity conservation and ecosystem services, are wicked challenges. Competing claims from various sectors call for evidence-based adaptive collaborative governance. Leveraging such approaches requires maintenance of several forms of social interactions and capitals. Focusing on Pan-European regions with different environmental histories and cultures, we estimate the state and trends of two groups of factors underpinning rural landscape stewardship, namely, (1) traditional rural landscape and novel face-to-face as well as virtual fora for social interaction, and (2) bonding, bridging, and linking forms of social capital.
    [Show full text]
  • Svetlana Frunchak the Making of Soviet Chernivtsi: National “Re
    1 Svetlana Frunchak The Making of Soviet Chernivtsi: National “Re-unification,” World War II, and the Fate of Jewish Czernowitz in Postwar Ukraine. Dissertation abstract This dissertation is a study of the incorporation of Chernivtsi into the Ukrainian Republic of the Soviet Union. One of the several developed cities acquired by the USSR in the course of World War II, Chernivtsi (aka Czernowitz and Cernăuţi) was a onetime Hapsburg provincial capital (1774-1918) and a part of the Romanian state in the interwar period (1918-1940). Dominated by its German ―lingua franca,‖ this urban space was also equally used to the sounds of Yiddish, East Slavic, Romanian, and Polish languages up until World War II. Yet Chernivtsi emerged from World War II, the Holocaust, and Soviet reconstruction as an almost homogeneous Ukrainian city that allegedly had always longed for re-unification with its Slavic brethren. Focusing on the late Stalinist period (1940-53) but covering earlier (1774-1940) and later (1953-present) periods, this study explores the relationship between the ideas behind the incorporation; the lived experience of the incorporation; and the historical memory of the city‘s distant and recent past. Central to this dissertation is the fate of the Jewish residents of Czernowitz-Chernivtsi. This community was transformed from an influential plurality to about one per cent of the city‘s population whose past was marginalized in local historical memory. This study demonstrates a multifaceted local experience of the war which was all but silenced by the dominant Soviet Ukrainian myth of the Great Patriotic war and the ―re- unification of all Ukrainian lands.‖ When the authors of the official Soviet historical and cultural narratives represented Stalin‘s annexation as the ―re-unification‖ of Ukraine, they in fact 2 constructed and popularized, in the form of state legislation, ethnographic and historical scholarship, and cultural productions, a new concept of ―historical Ukrainian lands‖ that was never fully elaborated by radical Ukrainian nationalists.
    [Show full text]
  • «Made in Bukovyna»
    ELECTRONIC GUIDE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP ACTIVITY IN CHERNIVTSI REGION «MADE IN BUKOVYNA» 2018 Contents Electronics and machine building………………………………………………………..5 «ARTON» private enterprise……………………………………………………………………………….6 JSC «SKB Electronmash»…………………………………………………………………………………..7 «Sokyrianskyi Mashynobudivnyi Zavod» ALC…………………………………………………………….8 «Mashzavod» Ltd…………………………………………………………………………………………...9 Research and Production Company (RPC) «Тensor»……………………………………………………...10 «SE Bordnetze-Ukraine» LLC (Chernivtsi region)………………………………………………….…….11 «Automotive Electric Ukraine» LLC (Chernivtsi region)…………………………………………………12 «Linhokomservis» LLC…………………………………………………………………………………...13 Institute of Thermoelectricity National Academy of Sciences and Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine…………………………………………………………………………………………………….14 Wood and forestry…………………………………………………………………….....15 Private enterprise «Kovali»………………………………………………………………………………..16 Public company «Vyzhnytsia dok»………………………………………………………………………..17 LTD «Pelet-GroupEko»…………………………………………………………………………………...18 State enterprise «Putyla forestry»………………………………………………………………………….19 State enterprise «Carpathians specialized forestry»……………………………………………………....20 Private enterprise «Lego»………………………………………………………………………………….21 «Impeks-service» LTD…………………………………………………………………………………….22 State enterprise «Sokyrianske Lisove Hospodarstvo»……………………………………………………..23 State enterprise «Storozhynets forestry»…………………………………………………………………..24 «BKM-WOOD» LLC……………………………………………………………………………………..25 State enterprise «Khotynske Lisove Hospodarstvo»………………………………………………………26
    [Show full text]
  • Historical and Cultural Heritage of the Region and Its Opportunities in Tourism and Excursion Activities (Case of Chernivtsi Region, Ukraine)
    GeoJournal of Tourism and Geosites Year XI, vol. 23, no. 3, 2018, p.808-823 ISSN 2065-0817, E-ISSN 2065-1198 DOI 10.30892/gtg.23316-330 HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL HERITAGE OF THE REGION AND ITS OPPORTUNITIES IN TOURISM AND EXCURSION ACTIVITIES (CASE OF CHERNIVTSI REGION, UKRAINE) Volodymyr KROOL Yuriy Fedkovych Chernivtsi National University, Department of Physical Geography, Geomorphology and Paleogeography, 2 Kotsyubynsky Str. Chernivtsi 58012, Ukraine, e-mail: [email protected] Anatolii VDOVICHEN Chernivtsi Institute of Trade and Economics of KNUTE, Department of Management and Tourism, 7 Tsentralna Square, Chernivtsi 58002, Ukraine, e-mail: [email protected] Roman HYSHCHUK* Chernivtsi Institute of Trade and Economics of KNUTE, Department of Management and Tourism, 7 Tsentralna Square, Chernivtsi 58002, Ukraine, e-mail: [email protected] Citation: Krool, V., Vdovichen, A., & Hyshchuk, R. (2018). HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL HERITAGE OF THE REGION AND ITS OPPORTUNITIES IN TOURISM AND EXCURSION ACTIVITIES (CASE OF CHERNIVTSI REGION, UKRAINE). GeoJournal of Tourism and Geosites, 23(3), 808–823. https://doi.org/10.30892/gtg.23316-330 Abstract: Chernivtsi region in Ukraine is a unique territory where the historical and cultural heritage of different time periods is represented: from Old Russian, Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian to Romanian and Ukrainian. The purpose of the article is a comprehensive assessment of the historical and cultural heritage of the Chernivtsi region for a more intensive further involvement in the tourism industry in the Carpathian region, together with neighboring EU countries: Romania, Slovakia, Poland. For this purpose, different status, state of preservation and spatial differences were taken into account together with the resources support throughout the territory under study.
    [Show full text]
  • Ukraine National Initiatives to Enhance Reforms Activity of the USAID Civic Oversight Project
    Ukraine National Initiatives to Enhance Reforms Activity of the USAID Civic Oversight Project Semi-annual Performance Report 1 October 2015 – 31 March 2016 Cooperative Agreement No. 121-A-00-08-00707-00 Submitted by Pact, Inc. Table of Contents I. Executive Summary ............................................................................................................ 3 II. Political Context and Civil Society Highlights................................................................... 4 III. Activities description .................................................................................................... 10 Objective 1: Effective, broad-based monitoring and advocacy campaigns implemented ... 10 Theme 1: European standards and values: ....................................................................... 10 Sub-Theme: support for people with disabilities: ............................................................. 17 Theme 2: Governmental accountability and anti-corruption ............................................ 20 Area 1 Support for Anti-corruption Reform ..................................................................... 20 Area 2 Support for Constitutional Reform: ...................................................................... 31 Area 3 Elections ................................................................................................................ 33 Objective 2: CSO Constituencies Expanded ........................................................................ 38 Objective 3: Media Engagement
    [Show full text]