In the context of the Russian-Ukrainian war, the issue of shaping and protecting national memory has taken on not only cultural and historical dimensions, but also strategic political and economic ones. The Russian invasion has presented Ukraine with a dual task: to ensure the stability of its historical identity in the face of external information influences and to create an effective model for post-war reconstruction. In such circumstances, the interpretation of the past will play a role in social consolidation, solidarity, and the selection of economic priorities. That is why legislative regulation of memory and related acts has become an important component of broader state security and development policy.
Illia Parshyn (Sun,) studied this question.