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Maryna Venneri

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Maryna Venneri

Maryna Venneri is a Ukrainian freelance writer providing policy analysis and academic research on the Eastern European region with a specific focus on civil war studies. She was previously a fellow with MEI’s Frontier Europe Initiative working on Black Sea security. She is a graduate in European and Global Affairs, an activist, and a researcher of the Eastern European region. Previously, Maryna worked as a Program Associate at the Club of Three, a Franco-German-British leadership initiative in London, and  as a Human Rights Social Media Trainee at the Ukrainian NGO “Right to Protection,” an executive body of the UNHCR Ukraine. 

The Latest from Maryna Venneri

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Russia’s occupation strategy — the biggest long-term threat to Ukraine’s stability
Photo by ALEKSEY FILIPPOV/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Russia’s occupation strategy — the biggest long-term threat to Ukraine’s stability

    Repeatedly throughout Russia’s history, its authorities have employed unlawful occupations, annexations, deportations, filtration, and ethnic dilution through an influx of Russian settlers to control and reshape the Eurasian map in favor of Russian expansionism. The de-occupation and reintegration of the Russian-controlled territories of Ukraine can be the only guarantee of durable peace in the heart of Europe.

    March 23, 2023

    Ways forward for the war in Ukraine
    Ethan Swope/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Ways forward for the war in Ukraine

    Fearing war fatigue in Ukraine or an escalation of tensions with the potential to spill over beyond region, the West is keen to act. But what can the EU and NATO do to help resolve the war in Ukraine?

    March 24, 2022

    Black Sea security: Is COVID-19 a window of opportunity for Ukraine?
  • Analysis
  • Black Sea security: Is COVID-19 a window of opportunity for Ukraine?

    The Black Sea region is currently managing military pressure from Russia, the economic influence of China, and soft power efforts of the West, making it a stage for power competition. With COVID-19 exacerbating Ukraine’s political weaknesses and economic vulnerabilities, Russia and China are increasingly adopting a united front in the Black Sea. Such geopolitical changes in power distribution require more active presence and involvement of the U.S. in the Black Sea.

    June 9, 2021

    America’s Black Sea strategy in 2021 and beyond: The case of Ukraine
  • Analysis
  • America’s Black Sea strategy in 2021 and beyond: The case of Ukraine

    Today, there are five conflicts that share similar features in the Black Sea. That is, they are protracted, separatist Russia-supported frozen and active conflicts in the former Soviet space. Deeply rooted in the history of Soviet territorial reorganization and ethnic mixing, conflicts in Transnistria (Moldova), Crimea and Donbas (Ukraine), and Abkhazia and South Ossetia (Georgia) are the result of violations to state borders that were integrated into the Soviet system.

    March 9, 2021

    The Significance of Ukraine's Maritime Industry for the Black Sea, and Beyond
  • Analysis
  • The Significance of Ukraine's Maritime Industry for the Black Sea, and Beyond

    While the geopolitical importance of the Black Sea is indisputable, more attention is needed to its separate actors. Ukraine, having had the largest territory of coastline in the Black Sea before the illegal annexation of Crimea, is ideally positioned to play a central role in the future of the region.

    November 4, 2020