Hello everyone,

Please see the message below about an upcoming panel next week about the 
consequences of the destruction of the Kakhovka Dam in Ukraine.

Tom
______________________________________________

Tom Deligiannis, PhD | Lecturer
Department of Global Studies |Wilfrid Laurier University
75 University Ave W. |Waterloo, ON, Canada | N2L3C5
tdeligian...@wlu.ca

Profile:  
https://www.wlu.ca/academics/faculties/faculty-of-arts/faculty-profiles/tom-deligiannis/index.html

________________________________



Online Panel. After Ecocide: Grappling With the Ecological and Socioeconomic 
Consequences of the Destruction of the New Kakhovka Dam in Southern Ukraine.

Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine. Munk School of Global Affairs and 
Public Policy. University of Toronto.



June 20, 2023. 12 pm EST

The scale of the disaster caused by the Russian Army’s ecocidal act of blowing 
up the dam of the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Station on June 6 has drawn 
comparisons with the explosion at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant. This panel 
brought together scholars of and from the most heavily affected regions in 
order to specify this war crime’s likely long-term environmental, economic, and 
social impacts, and to discuss how different actors can best respond to them in 
the midst Russia’s ongoing war against Ukraine.



Registration:



https://munkschool.utoronto.ca/event/after-ecocide-grappling-ecological-and-socioeconomic-consequences-destruction-kakhovka



Panel Participants:



Anna Olenenko is an environmental historian from Ukraine, currently at the 
University of Alberta (Edmonton, Canada). She has a Candidate of Sciences 
degree in history from the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine in 2013. 
Anna’s research interests are related to the environmental history of Ukraine, 
especially the Steppe region, and animal studies. Her research on the history 
of Dnipro wetlands which disappeared in the 1950s due the construction of 
Kakhovka Hydroelectric Station was published in the article“’Our New Sea Is Our 
New Sorrow’: The Conflict between the Ukrainian and the Soviet in the Struggle 
for the Design of the Lower Dnipro’s Landscape,” Ab Imperio 2019.



Viktor Karamushka has a candidate of sciences degree in biology and is 
currently head of the Department of Environmental Studies at the National 
University “Kyiv Mohyla Academy.” His areas of research include environmental 
microbiology, ecology and environmental management. His recent publications 
include “Climate Change Processes’ Impact on Wetland Ecosystems of Polissia 
Region in Ukraine” (With S. Boychenko) and “The Socio-Economics of the Black 
Sea Coast” for the Black Sea State of Environment Report (2019).



Ivan Moysiyenko has a doctor of biological sciences degree and is professor and 
is head of the Department of Botany at Kherson State University. A key focus of 
his recent research has been Ukraine’s grassland habitats. For example, he has 
studied kurgans as refugia of steppe flora in the agricultural landscapes in 
southern Ukraine. He has carried out applied research in preparation for the 
formation of many protected areas in Ukraine, including the National Park 
“Kamianska Sich.” Recent co-authored publications include “Vascular Plants of 
Old Cemeteries of the Lower Dnipro Region” and “Potential Protected Areas in 
Kherson Oblast.”



Ihor Pylypenko is Professor of Geography and Ecology and Dean at the Faculty of 
Geography, Biology, and Ecology at Kherson State University. His areas of 
expertise include regional development, rural development, and nature 
conservation in southern Ukraine, particularly in Kherson Oblast. He has 
commented extensively in the Ukrainian media about the consequences of the 
destruction of the Kakhovka HES. His recent publications include “Mykolaiv and 
Kherson as Port Centres: Common Characteristics and Problems of Development” 
and the co-authored article “A Regional Analysis of the Use of Recreation 
Potential of Ukrainian Regions in Contemporary Geopological Conditions” (2021).



Brian Kuns is currently Associate Senior Lecturer at the Swedish University of 
Agricultural Sciences (SLU) in the Department of Rural and Urban Development. 
He received his PhD in Human Geography from Stockholm University and he studies 
questions of agricultural corporatization, changing agrarian structure, 
smallholders, and farm labor, with respect to Ukraine and Sweden. Brian has 
conducted research in Kherson oblast in southern Ukraine, studying, among other 
things, how irrigated agriculture, which in this region is dependent on the now 
emptying Kakhovka reservoir, has changed during the period of Ukrainian 
independence. He is author of “'In These Complicated Times': An Environmental 
History of Irrigated Agriculture in Post-Communist Ukraine” which appeared in 
Water Alternatives. 
(https://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol11/v11issue3/468-a11-3-21/file)



Moderator: Tanya Richardson, Associate Professor, Anthropology and Global 
Studies Programs, Wilfrid Laurier University.








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