War has been an ever-present feature of human existence. The analysis of wars has tended to focus on either their causes or the military and strategic consequences of a conflict. This book argues that war can have a much wider impact across layers of society that go beyond international boundaries. It presents a heuristic multi-disciplinary framework for analysing the ripple and backwash effects across five connected analytical layers around the world: material; human capabilities; economic; values belief and attitudes; policy and governance; and power. Through this framework, the book introduces a set of empirically rich and theoretically informed studies which examine the first consequences of the war in Ukraine following the invasion of Russia in February 2022. This multi-disciplinary approach shows that the effects of the war were much deeper and sustained.
This volume will be of interest to students and scholars of international humanitarian law, security studies, peace and conflict studies, and European history. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Policy Studies.
This book introduces a set of empirically rich and theoretically informed studies which examine the first consequences of the war in Ukraine following the invasion of Russia in February 2022. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Policy Studies.
Introduction - The effects of wars: lessons from the war in Ukraine Part
I: The Effects on Human Capabilities and Economies
1. The impact of the war
on human capital and productivity in Ukraine
2. Tax policy of Ukraine in
terms of martial law
3. Disrupted harvests: how Ukraine Russia war
influences global food systems a systematic review
4. Uncertainty, stock
and commodity prices during the Ukraine-Russia war
5. The impact of the
Russia-Ukraine War on European Union currencies: a high-frequency analysis
Part II: The Effects on Values, Beliefs and Attitudes
6. Forged in the fires
of war: the rise of a new Ukrainian identity
7. Increased support for
collective defence in times of threat: European public opinion before and
after Russias invasion of Ukraine
8. Chains of insecurities: constructing
Ukraines agency in times of war Part III: The Effects on Policy and
Governance
9. EU arms collaboration, procurement, and offsets: the impact of
the war in Ukraine
10. Gradually and then suddenly: the effects of Russias
attacks on the evolution of cybersecurity policy in Lithuania
11. The war in
Ukraine, the EUs geopolitical awakening and implications for the contested
neighbourhood
12. The arrival of Ukrainian refugees as an opportunity to
advance migrant integration policy
13. Migration and soft power: the EUs
visa and refugee policy response to the war in Ukraine
14. Conflict
disruptions of epistemic communities: initial lessons from the impact of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine Part IV: The Effects on Power and Relationships
15. Strategic narratives of Russias war in Ukraine: perspectives from China
16. Russia-Ukraine War, India, and US grand strategy: punishing or leveraging
neutrality?
17. Wind of change: the impact of REPowerEU policy reforms on
gas security
18. The Arab Gulf states in the Asian energy market: is the
Russia-Ukraine war a game changer
19. Rethinking change in Japan's security
policy: punctuated equilibrium theory and Japan's response to the Russian
invasion of Ukraine
Pierre Bocquillon is Lecturer in EU Politics and Policy at the School of Politics, Philosophy, Language and Communication Studies, University of East Anglia, UK. His current research interests include the external dimension of EUs energy and climate policies, the politics of renewable energy promotion and the democratic governance of energy and climate change.
Suzanne Doyle is Lecturer in International Relations at the School of Politics, Philosophy, Language and Communication Studies, University of East Anglia, UK. Her areas of expertise include Nuclear Politics, US and British Defence Policy, Security Studies and the Cold War.
Toby S. James is Professor of Politics & Public Policy in the School of Politics, Philosophy, Language and Communication Studies, University of East Anglia, UK. His research interests are broad and cover democracy in practice, electoral institutions and malpractice, political participation, political leadership, statecraft theory, public administration, theories of the policy process and research methodologies.
Ra Mason is Associate Professor at the School of Politics, Philosophy, Language and Communication Studies, University of East Anglia, UK. He is an internationally recognised specialist in the international relations of the Indo-Pacific, with a specific focus on Japan.
Soul Park is Lecturer in International Relations at the School of Politics, Philosophy, Language and Communication Studies, University of East Anglia, UK. His main research and teaching interests are in international security, strategic studies, international relations theory and qualitative methods.
Matilde Rosina is Lecturer in International Relations at the College of Business, Arts and Social Sciences, Brunel University London, UK. Her research focuses on international political economy and migration, with specific reference to the European context.