contributors

Eva Ievgeniia Babenko

Is a Doctoral Researcher at Åbo Akademi University, Turku. Her research interests include mediation and reconciliation efforts with the long-term occupied territories of Donbas and the role of conflicting identities in overcoming the consequences of war. She is also researching Russian propaganda in Donbas and the post-colonial perspective of wars in former Soviet countries.

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Articles by Eva Ievgeniia Babenko

  1. Echoes of peace, lives of war WOMEN’S NARRATIVES OF BELONGING IN DONBAS

    Drawing on five narrative interviews with women from Ukraine’s Donbas, this article explores how belonging and national identification shift across three temporalities: everyday life before 2014, the outbreak of war in 2014, and the full-scale invasion in 2022. Using grounded theory coding, it traces how conflicting Ukrainian and Russian nation-making projects are experienced through domestic routines, media consumption, and encounters with state institutions. Before 2014, regional pride and Russophone familiarity distanced Ukrainian narratives, until war shattered this normality and forced difficult, morally charged choices. After 2022, respondents describe intensified fear, betrayal, and a reconfiguration of home and belonging, while distinguishing survival from political loyalty under occupation. The article argues that identity in Donbas is neither binary nor linear, but a gendered, emotional, and relational process shaped through everyday practices and retrospective moral evaluation. By centring women’s voices, the study complicates top-down accounts of nationhood and shows why reconciliation must address mistrust, recognition, and personal repair and dignity.

  2. How Are We Going to Remember? Envisioning Postwar Memory and Commemoration in Ukraine

    This essay explores the intersection of personal reflection and Ukraine’s collective journey towards reconciliation amid the ongoing war with Russia. Set against the peaceful backdrop of a CBEES Summer School, the author delves into the challenges of memory construction, highlighting Ukraine’s historical complexities and the importance of inclusive memorialization in shaping a unified postwar identity. The essay draws comparisons with Eastern Europe’s post-communist memory work, emphasizing reconciliation and social cohesion.

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