Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://r.donnu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/2000
Title: Migration Processes in Modern Ukrainian-Polish Discourse
Authors: Nagornyak, Tetyana
Pachos, Iuliia
Bezuglyi, Pavlo
Keywords: Ukraine
Poland
migration of Ukrainians
state policy
migration policy
Issue Date: 30-Sep-2020
Publisher: EJTS European Journal of Transformation Studies
Citation: Nagornyak, T., Pachos, I., & Bezuglyi, P. (2020). Migration Processes in Modern Ukrainian-Polish Discourse. European Journal of Tranformation Studies, 8(1), 33–48. Retrieved from https://czasopisma.bg.ug.edu.pl/index.php/journal-transformation/article/view/4995
Abstract: The purpose of the article is to determine the specifics of Ukrainian-Polish discourse on migration processes, which consists of symbolic interactions as depictions of state policies, at the center of which is human capital and strategies for its conversion. The preservation and development of its human capital in the context of globalization movements is a question of the protection of national interests and the capacity of the economic foundations of society for Ukraine and Poland. Migration processes, as an objective indicator of a globalized world, are political in nature and can be the result of state policy, both as a country of motivation for migration and as a concerted action of states that are interested in getting new human capital. External and internal factors of migration of Ukrainians through the prism of state decisions, the state of EJTS European Journal of Transformation Studies 2020, V. 8, No. 134social protection of the population, educational opportunities, and business prospects for youth are actualized in the conditions of increasing interest in the renewal of the human capital of Poland
Description: Стаття у міжнародному журналі EJTS European Journal of Transformation Studies
URI: https://r.donnu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/2000
Appears in Collections:Бібліографічні матеріали

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
migration.pdf256,15 kBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.