ECONOMIC CRIME UNDER MARTIAL LAW IN UKRAINE

The ongoing instability of Ukraine within the global political and economic arenas has resulted in an escalation of criminal activity within the nation. The aim of this research is to study economic crime under martial law in Ukraine and to develop effective ways of preventing it. The paper presents...

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Main Authors: Maksym Korniienko, Hanna Foros, Serhii Baranov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Izdevnieciba “Baltija Publishing” 2024-12-01
Series:Baltic Journal of Economic Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://baltijapublishing.lv/index.php/issue/article/view/2644
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author Maksym Korniienko
Hanna Foros
Serhii Baranov
author_facet Maksym Korniienko
Hanna Foros
Serhii Baranov
author_sort Maksym Korniienko
collection DOAJ
description The ongoing instability of Ukraine within the global political and economic arenas has resulted in an escalation of criminal activity within the nation. The aim of this research is to study economic crime under martial law in Ukraine and to develop effective ways of preventing it. The paper presents a systematic analysis of the state of research on economic crime under martial law in Ukraine, topical issues of economic crime prevention and its methodological tools. The dearth of research into the challenges of preventing economic crime under martial law in Ukraine, coupled with the absence of efficacious measures to address these issues, underscores the imperative for a comprehensive enhancement of the legislative framework for preventing economic crime. Consequently, the prevailing national security and defence strategy falls short in ensuring the alignment of the Ukrainian security sector with the scientific and practical imperatives. A substantial proportion of economic crime under martial law in Ukraine is latent crime, primarily attributable to two factors. Firstly, the victim's reluctance to report crimes is predominantly influenced by circumstances that are beyond their control. Secondly, and more commonly, victims are unable to report crimes committed against them, predominantly in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine. The study of the state and trends of economic crime demonstrated a marked increase in the number of economic crimes, particularly fraud, during periods of martial law.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2256-0742
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language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Izdevnieciba “Baltija Publishing”
record_format Article
series Baltic Journal of Economic Studies
spelling doaj-art-ed4305c0a74f461297761e647357c6782025-02-10T12:08:18ZengIzdevnieciba “Baltija Publishing”Baltic Journal of Economic Studies2256-07422256-09632024-12-0110522222710.30525/2256-0742/2024-10-5-222-2272644ECONOMIC CRIME UNDER MARTIAL LAW IN UKRAINEMaksym Korniienko0Hanna Foros1Serhii Baranov2Odesa State University of Internal Affairs, Ukraine (corresponding author)Odesa State University of Internal Affairs, UkraineOdesa State University of Internal Affairs, UkraineThe ongoing instability of Ukraine within the global political and economic arenas has resulted in an escalation of criminal activity within the nation. The aim of this research is to study economic crime under martial law in Ukraine and to develop effective ways of preventing it. The paper presents a systematic analysis of the state of research on economic crime under martial law in Ukraine, topical issues of economic crime prevention and its methodological tools. The dearth of research into the challenges of preventing economic crime under martial law in Ukraine, coupled with the absence of efficacious measures to address these issues, underscores the imperative for a comprehensive enhancement of the legislative framework for preventing economic crime. Consequently, the prevailing national security and defence strategy falls short in ensuring the alignment of the Ukrainian security sector with the scientific and practical imperatives. A substantial proportion of economic crime under martial law in Ukraine is latent crime, primarily attributable to two factors. Firstly, the victim's reluctance to report crimes is predominantly influenced by circumstances that are beyond their control. Secondly, and more commonly, victims are unable to report crimes committed against them, predominantly in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine. The study of the state and trends of economic crime demonstrated a marked increase in the number of economic crimes, particularly fraud, during periods of martial law.http://baltijapublishing.lv/index.php/issue/article/view/2644economic crimemartial law in ukrainecrime under martial lawcrime preventionfraud
spellingShingle Maksym Korniienko
Hanna Foros
Serhii Baranov
ECONOMIC CRIME UNDER MARTIAL LAW IN UKRAINE
Baltic Journal of Economic Studies
economic crime
martial law in ukraine
crime under martial law
crime prevention
fraud
title ECONOMIC CRIME UNDER MARTIAL LAW IN UKRAINE
title_full ECONOMIC CRIME UNDER MARTIAL LAW IN UKRAINE
title_fullStr ECONOMIC CRIME UNDER MARTIAL LAW IN UKRAINE
title_full_unstemmed ECONOMIC CRIME UNDER MARTIAL LAW IN UKRAINE
title_short ECONOMIC CRIME UNDER MARTIAL LAW IN UKRAINE
title_sort economic crime under martial law in ukraine
topic economic crime
martial law in ukraine
crime under martial law
crime prevention
fraud
url http://baltijapublishing.lv/index.php/issue/article/view/2644
work_keys_str_mv AT maksymkorniienko economiccrimeundermartiallawinukraine
AT hannaforos economiccrimeundermartiallawinukraine
AT serhiibaranov economiccrimeundermartiallawinukraine