Logo image
Humanitarian Demining and Ukraine’s Recovery: Lessons Yet to Learn
Report   Open access

Humanitarian Demining and Ukraine’s Recovery: Lessons Yet to Learn

Anna Anisimova
FREE Network Policy Brief Series, Forum for Research on Eastern Europe and Emerging Economies (FREE) Network
2025-11

Abstract

Conflict Ukraine
This policy brief examines how land mine action underpins Ukraine’s reconstruction and economic renewal. It outlines the current scale of contamination and the national humanitarian demining strategy. The brief also reviews international experience from countries around the world, discussing the economic recovery driven by demining and the economic efficiency of mine action. It documents significant variation in direct mine action costs across countries and contexts, complicating the assessment of these costs in the case of Ukraine. The brief also discusses the indirect costs arising from systemic inefficiencies in Ukraine’s demining effort, including fragmented governance, shortages of qualified personnel, outdated standards, and security constraints. It concludes that Ukraine’s success in transforming demining into a catalyst for recovery depends on effective coordination, data-driven planning, gender inclusion, and the adoption of best international practices.
url
View at publisherView
Published (Version of record) Open

Metrics

1 Record Views

Details

Logo image