Subtopic Deep Dive

Sustainable Development and Financial Security Ukraine
Research Guide

What is Sustainable Development and Financial Security Ukraine?

Sustainable Development and Financial Security in Ukraine examines green economy transitions, social security reforms, and financial stability models amid crises within labor markets and education systems.

This subtopic analyzes Ukraine's pathways to resilient growth via digitalization, migration impacts, and war-related disruptions (Prohorovs, 2022; Kwilinski et al., 2020). Over 10 key papers from 2009-2024, with top-cited works exceeding 189 citations, link EU digital economies to poverty risks and skilled labor retention (Oliinyk et al., 2021; Bilan et al., 2020). Research models inclusive strategies for post-COVID and conflict recovery.

15
Curated Papers
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Key Challenges

Why It Matters

Ukraine's alignment with EU sustainable frameworks relies on digitalization to reduce poverty risks, as shown in Kwilinski et al. (2020) with 189 citations analyzing EU states. War impacts demand financial security models for businesses, per Prohorovs (2022, 127 citations), affecting labor competitiveness. Reforms in skilled migration and HR practices support green transitions (Oliinyk et al., 2021; Bilan et al., 2020), guiding policy for economic resilience amid crises.

Key Research Challenges

War-Induced Economic Disruptions

Russia's invasion triggers trade restrictions and business adaptations, complicating financial security (Prohorovs, 2022). Labor markets face skilled worker shortages, hindering sustainable growth. Modeling post-conflict recovery remains data-limited.

Digitalization-Poverty Linkages

EU digital levels impact poverty risks, but Ukraine-specific causal models are underdeveloped (Kwilinski et al., 2020). Education systems lag in preparing workers for green transitions. Metrics for social exclusion need refinement.

Skilled Migration Retention

High-skilled outflows reduce competitiveness; SMEs struggle with hiring (Oliinyk et al., 2021; Bilan et al., 2020). Transnational family costs exacerbate brain drain (Tolstokorova, 2009). Policies for inclusive growth lack empirical testing.

Essential Papers

1.

Digitalization of the EU Economies and People at Risk of Poverty or Social Exclusion

Aleksy Кwilinski, Oleksandr Vyshnevskyi, Henryk Dźwigoł · 2020 · Journal of risk and financial management · 189 citations

Despite the fact that a comprehensive analysis of digitalization processes in the EU member states has been carried out, the impact of a country’s digitalization level on the risks of poverty and s...

2.

The Impact of Migration of Highly Skilled Workers on The Country’s Competitiveness and Economic Growth

Olena Oliinyk, Yuriy Bilan, Halyna Mishchuk et al. · 2021 · MONTENEGRIN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS · 141 citations

The links between the migration of highly skilled workers and economic growth (in terms of GNI per capita) and the competitiveness of countries have been studied. The study is based on statistics f...

3.

Russia’s War in Ukraine: Consequences for European Countries’ Businesses and Economies

Anatolijs Prohorovs · 2022 · Journal of risk and financial management · 127 citations

Companies and countries have needed to adapt their activities to the consequences of the Russian war in Ukraine. The analysis in this article shows that both the Russian war in Ukraine and the subs...

4.

COVID-19 and the New Normal of Organizations and Employees: An Overview

Aarthi Raghavan, Mehmet Akif Demircioğlu, Serik Orazgaliyev · 2021 · Sustainability · 116 citations

The COVID-19 pandemic has hit organizations and employees in every sector worldwide in unprecedented ways. It became extremely difficult for organizations and employees across sectors to operate un...

5.

Digital Transformation of Organizational Culture under Conditions of the Information Economy

Наталія Трушкіна, Rafis Abazov, Natalia Rynkevych et al. · 2020 · Virtual Economics · 113 citations

This article presents the results of an expert survey as a method of empirical research to identify current problems, barriers, features, trends, and directions of the transformation of organizatio...

6.

Application of augmented reality technologies for preparation of specialists of new technological era

Anna Іatsyshyn, Валерія Ковач, Yevhen Romanenko et al. · 2020 · 110 citations

Augmented reality is one of the most modern information visualization technologies. Number of scientific studies on different aspects of augmented reality technology development and application is ...

7.

Generative Artificial Intelligence in Business: Towards a Strategic Human Resource Management Framework

Soumyadeb Chowdhury, Pawan Budhwar, Geoffrey Wood · 2024 · British Journal of Management · 99 citations

Abstract As businesses and society navigate the potentials of generative artificial intelligence (GAI), the integration of these technologies introduces unique challenges and opportunities for huma...

Reading Guide

Foundational Papers

Start with Tolstokorova (2009, 16 cites) for migration family costs in Ukraine, then Belás et al. (2014, 43 cites) on SME environments, as they ground labor-financial dynamics pre-digital era.

Recent Advances

Study Kwilinski et al. (2020, 189 cites) for EU digital-poverty models applicable to Ukraine, Prohorovs (2022, 127 cites) for war impacts, and Oliinyk et al. (2021, 141 cites) for migration competitiveness.

Core Methods

Uses regression on economic stats (Oliinyk et al., 2021), expert surveys (Trushkina et al., 2020), and business adaptation analysis (Prohorovs, 2022). Includes AR for education (Іatsyshyn et al., 2020).

How PapersFlow Helps You Research Sustainable Development and Financial Security Ukraine

Discover & Search

PapersFlow's Research Agent uses searchPapers and exaSearch to query 'Ukraine sustainable development financial security labor market' yielding 250M+ OpenAlex papers, including Prohorovs (2022). citationGraph reveals impact chains from Kwilinski et al. (2020) to war studies; findSimilarPapers expands to Oliinyk et al. (2021).

Analyze & Verify

Analysis Agent applies readPaperContent on Prohorovs (2022) abstracts for war-labor links, verifyResponse with CoVe for claim accuracy, and runPythonAnalysis with pandas to regress citation data against GDP impacts from Kwilinski et al. (2020). GRADE grading scores evidence strength in migration models (Oliinyk et al., 2021). Statistical verification confirms digitalization-poverty correlations.

Synthesize & Write

Synthesis Agent detects gaps in Ukraine-specific green HR reforms post-war, flags contradictions between migration benefits (Oliinyk et al., 2021) and costs (Tolstokorova, 2009). Writing Agent uses latexEditText, latexSyncCitations for Prohorovs (2022), and latexCompile for policy reports; exportMermaid diagrams labor flow models.

Use Cases

"Model financial security impacts of war on Ukraine labor markets using recent papers."

Research Agent → searchPapers + citationGraph on Prohorovs (2022) → Analysis Agent → runPythonAnalysis (pandas regression on economic data) → researcher gets verified GDP-labor impact plot.

"Draft LaTeX report on sustainable digitalization for Ukraine education reforms."

Research Agent → exaSearch 'digitalization Ukraine education sustainable' → Synthesis → gap detection → Writing Agent → latexEditText + latexSyncCitations (Kwilinski et al., 2020) + latexCompile → researcher gets compiled PDF with figures.

"Find code for simulating skilled migration in Ukraine economies."

Research Agent → paperExtractUrls from Oliinyk et al. (2021) → Code Discovery → paperFindGithubRepo + githubRepoInspect → researcher gets runnable Python sim for GNI per capita migration models.

Automated Workflows

Deep Research workflow conducts systematic review of 50+ papers on Ukraine financial security, chaining searchPapers → readPaperContent → GRADE → structured report with citation graphs. DeepScan applies 7-step analysis to Kwilinski et al. (2020), verifying poverty-digital links via CoVe checkpoints. Theorizer generates theory on post-war green labor models from Prohorovs (2022) and Oliinyk et al. (2021).

Frequently Asked Questions

What defines sustainable development and financial security in Ukraine?

It covers green transitions, social reforms, and stability amid crises like war and COVID, focusing on labor and education (Prohorovs, 2022; Kwilinski et al., 2020).

What methods dominate this subtopic?

Correlation-regression on migration-GNI (Oliinyk et al., 2021), expert surveys on digital culture (Trushkina et al., 2020), and business impact analysis (Prohorovs, 2022).

What are key papers?

Top: Kwilinski et al. (2020, 189 cites) on digitalization-poverty; Prohorovs (2022, 127 cites) on war economies; Oliinyk et al. (2021, 141 cites) on skilled migration.

What open problems exist?

Ukraine-specific causal models for digital-green growth, post-war skilled retention policies, and education for financial resilience lack longitudinal data.

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