Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 2nd May 2025, 07:49:34am BST
Food Politics & EU Governance 03: Russia’s war against Ukraine and its broader impacts: food, water, sanctions
Time:
Wednesday, 03/Sept/2025:
9:00am - 10:30am
Session Chair: Laura Gelhaus
Presentations
Urban Resilience in Crisis: Food and Water Security Amid Forced Displacement in Poland and Ukraine
Karina Shyrokykh, Jesine Lindahl
Stockholm University, Sweden
As forced displacement crises escalate worldwide, ensuring access to essential resources like food and water for displaced populations and host communities has become a critical challenge. Cities, as primary points of entry and settlement, play a pivotal role in addressing the needs of internally displaced persons (IDPs) and refugees. However, they also face significant pressures on their economic, political, and social systems, particularly during sudden population influxes driven by conflict, climate change, or labor migration. This paper investigates the challenges and solutions for urban food and water security in the context of forced displacement, focusing on four case study cities in Poland and Ukraine—Uzhhorod, Rzeszów, Lviv, and Kraków—following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Using a comparative case study methodology and building on in-depth interviews, this study has three primary objectives. First, it identifies the key challenges in ensuring food and water supply in these cities amidst a surge in forcibly displaced populations. Second, it explores effective solutions implemented to address rapidly evolving needs. Third, it examines the roles played by various stakeholders, including international organisations, national governments, local authorities, and civil society in mitigating these challenges. The findings contribute to understanding how cities can effectively respond to the immediate needs of IDPs and refugees, with a particular focus on the differing capacities of smaller and larger cities. The findings from the four case studies illustrate the challenges and innovative solutions implemented in response to the displacement crisis. The paper concludes with practical recommendations for improving urban resilience and preparedness in managing displacement-related crises, offering insights relevant to cities.
Hegemony Through Standards: Economic Sanctions, Food Safety, and Geopolitical Competition between Russia and the EU
Isabell Burmester
Sorbonne Nouvelle University, France
This paper examines the interplay of regulatory power and food safety standards in the context of the European Union (EU) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). It argues that food safety regulations, while ostensibly technical, serve as tools of geopolitical strategy. By situating the analysis within the current context of intensified geoeconomic competition between the EU and Russia, particularly amidst the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, the study highlights the role of economic sanctions and regulatory measures used by Russia under the pretext of food safety. The findings reveal that regulatory competition between these two blocs creates both constraints and opportunities for neighbourhood countries. Through the lens of sectoral compliance and macroeconomic integration, this paper demonstrates that domestic actors in Moldova and Armenia navigate these dual pressures to exploit access to both regimes, challenging the notion of exclusive alignment. The study offers new insights into the geopolitics of regulatory power and the strategic use of food safety regimes as a mechanism of influence, contributing to broader debates on regional hegemony and the weaponization of economic interdependence.
Transforming Security Dynamics in Eastern Europe: Strategic Implications Following Russia’s Full-Scale Invasion of Ukraine
Tomasz Stępniewski1, Alicja Zyguła2
1Catholic University of Lublin, Poland, Poland; 2Catholic University of Lublin, Poland, Poland
The full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia has fundamentally transformed the security dynamics in Eastern Europe, prompting a reassessment of European Union (EU) policies in the region. While the Euromaidan revolution and the conflict in Donbas initially spurred EU Member States to prioritize stabilizing Ukraine, broader strategic considerations for Eastern Europe and the South Caucasus have been sidelined. This paper examines the imperative for recalibrating the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) and the Eastern Partnership (EaP) to address the shifting geopolitical realities. The static nature of current neighbourhood policies limits the EU’s ability to effectively respond to emerging conflicts and rapidly changing conditions in its southern and eastern peripheries. As both the EU and its neighbouring regions experience significant flux, this paper argues for a reconfiguration of the policy of conditionality underpinning the ENP to better align with the EU’s strategic objectives and interests in the region.