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Informationen zum Autor Viktoriya Sereda is Director of the research group PRISMA UKRAÏNA: War, Migration and Memory at the Forum Transregionale Studien Berlin; a senior researcher at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, a professor at the Ukrainian Catholic University. Studied in L'viv, Budapest and Edinburgh; was a research fellow at Harvard, universities of Jena and Basel, the Institute of Advanced Studies Berlin. Klappentext This Element offers a multi-scalar perspective on the transformational effects of war and dislocation on people's sense of belonging. It begins with an examination of the brief historical and socio-demographic profiles of Crimea and the Donbas, stages of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, main explanatory frameworks as presented in the scholarly literature and policy reports, with a critical re-evaluation of identity-based explanations, and the directions of conflict-driven displacement flows. It examines state failures and the role of internal displacement governance in shaping new lines of social inclusion or exclusion through the production of multiple physical, symbolic and bureaucratic borders. It discusses Ukraine's civil society response to IDP dislocation and IDPs' engagement through various formal and non-formal networks. The final section explores the multidimensional and complex (dis)connections that IDPs experience with regard to their imagined past, their new places of residence and the social groups perceived as important in their hierarchies of belonging. Zusammenfassung A perspective on the transformational effects of war and dislocation on people's sense of belonging. Examines state failures and the role of internal displacement governance in shaping new lines of social inclusion or exclusion. It discusses Ukraine's civil society response to IDP dislocation and IDPs' engagement. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Introduction; 2. Conflict and (Re)shaped Narratives of Belonging (National Identities, Linguistic Divisions, Historical Memory); 3. Empowering the Disempowered: The Response of Civil Society to the State Governance of the Internally Displaced Population; 4. Testing the Boundaries of Inclusion and Exclusion: IDPs' Connections and Disconnections with Social Groups, Places and Trends of Memory (Re)production; 5. Conclusions....