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  1. Seeing pink: Searching for gender justice through opposition in Ukraine.Marian Rubchak - 2012 - European Journal of Women's Studies 19 (1):55-72.
    The collapse of the Soviet empire in 1991 opened up an important window of opportunity for female self-reidentification in Ukraine. Broadly speaking, thus far the country’s transition from a totalitarian society to a democratizing one has produced two waves of opposition. The First Wave began with a neotraditional form of rejection of communist values. Eventually, it was succeeded by a new opposition, this time to the newly established dominant cultural code. One of the most important characteristics to distinguish the First (...)
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  • Guardians and Protectors: The Volunteer Women of the Donbas Conflict.Christina Olha Jarymowycz - 2020 - Feminist Review 126 (1):106-122.
    How does war reconfigure women’s social roles and status? This article investigates how women’s volunteering during conflict can challenge gendered divisions within society and transform the binary of masculine protector and feminine protected. When the Donbas conflict erupted in Ukraine in 2014, women assumed central roles as civilian volunteers who aided populations affected by violence. They gained a high level of social status in the context of a weak state, distrusted by its populace. Based on ten months of fieldwork and (...)
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