How Russia uses science to justify the annexation of Ukrainian territories

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Type of the article: Research Article

This paper explores how Russia uses the international academic sphere, including scientific papers, scientometric databases, international publishers, and international organizations, as a propaganda tool to legitimize its appropriation of Ukrainian territories and Ukrainian academic institutions there. To do this, a bibliometric analysis was used. The results showed that thousands of academic papers published in 2014–2024 in peer-reviewed journals by Russian academicians marked Ukrainian territories as those referring and affiliated with the Russian Federation. The same is true for the case of editorial boards of international journals, where Ukrainian cities were incorrectly marked as part of the Russian Federation. Quite often, those organizations that provide affiliations in the occupied territories of Ukraine are not even legitimate: they were created by Russia using the captured Ukrainian scientific infrastructure and often named similarly or the same as the existing Ukrainian institutions-in-exile. It is important that the international scientific community put an end to this misuse of its resources. The study findings highlighted the importance and urgency of coordinated actions from academic journals, publishing platforms, and scientometric databases towards vigilant oversight of the content they host and accountability of the authors to prevent the dissemination, indexing, or promotion of Russian narratives and propaganda related to the appropriation of the Ukrainian territories.

Acknowledgment
Alex Plastun gratefully acknowledges financial support provided by Volkswagen Foundation, Ref.: 9C853, Project “Sustaining Ukrainian Scholarship”, hosted by New Europe College.

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    • Figure A1. Example of mentioning the Ukrainian city of Simferopol as part of the Russian Federation
    • Figure B1. Example of mentioning the Ukrainian city of Sevastopol as part of the Russian Federation
    • Table 1. Ukrainian territories marked as Russian in Scopus in 2022–2024
    • Table 2. Number of publications by publisher in Scopus in 2023, affiliating Ukrainian cities to the Russian Federation
    • Table 3. Selected comments from publishers regarding the designations of territories
    • Table 4. Main organizations that are used to affiliate Ukrainian territories to Russia, together with a number of affected publications listed by Scopus for 2023 and 2024
    • Table 5. Examples of selected Ukrainian institutes that are impersonated by illegal Russian entities
    • Table 6. Russian propaganda of annexation in academic papers: Selected cases indexed in Scopus or published by international publishers
    • Table C1. The list of 50 Springer Journals spreading the Russian propaganda
    • Conceptualization
      Alex Plastun
    • Funding acquisition
      Alex Plastun
    • Investigation
      Alex Plastun, Vіacheslav Plastun, Oksana Kazak
    • Methodology
      Alex Plastun, Liudmyla Sliusareva
    • Project administration
      Alex Plastun
    • Resources
      Alex Plastun, Tetiana Hryn'ova
    • Supervision
      Alex Plastun
    • Writing – original draft
      Alex Plastun, Tetiana Hryn'ova, Vіacheslav Plastun, Oksana Kazak
    • Writing – review & editing
      Alex Plastun, Tetiana Hryn'ova, Liudmyla Sliusareva
    • Data curation
      Tetiana Hryn'ova, Vіacheslav Plastun, Liudmyla Sliusareva, Oksana Kazak
    • Formal Analysis
      Tetiana Hryn'ova, Liudmyla Sliusareva, Oksana Kazak
    • Visualization
      Tetiana Hryn'ova, Oksana Kazak
    • Software
      Vіacheslav Plastun
    • Validation
      Vіacheslav Plastun, Liudmyla Sliusareva