3. Cultural and creative sectors
Ukraine
Last update: November, 2017
Basic principles of the preservation of cultural heritage are reflected in the country's main law, The Constitution of Ukraine, which was adopted at the fifth session of the Ukrainian parliament (Verkhovna Rada) on the 28 June 1996. It proclaims that "Cultural heritage shall be protected by law" (part 4, Article 54); "The State shall ensure the preservation of historical monuments and other objects of cultural value..." (part 5, Article 54); "Everyone shall be obliged not to harm nature or cultural heritage, and to compensate for any damage he / she inflicts (Article 66)".
The Law of Ukraine “On Protection of Cultural Heritage” №1805-ІІІ of 08.06.2000 (with amendments of 2012, 2013, 2014, 2014, 2015, 2016; Chapter 2 “Management of Protection of Cultural Heritage”) maintains that state management in the sphere of protection of cultural heritage is entrusted to the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine and the specially authorized bodies for the protection of cultural heritage.
The Ministry of Culture of Ukraine (MCU) is authorized to be the central body of executive power in the sphere of protection of cultural heritage. The structural unit of the MCU is the Office for Cultural Heritage Protection realizing public policy on cultural heritage protection and preservation; monitoring and supervision of compliance with laws on cultural heritage protection; and promotion of international cooperation in the given field. At the same time part of the functions concerning architecture and town-planning monuments are performed by the Ministry of Regional Development and Construction of Ukraine (MRDCU), which is the main body in the system of central bodies of executive power for the issues of realization of state regional policy and policy in the sphere of construction, architecture and town-planning, improvement of administrative and territorial arrangement in Ukraine. In accordance with the tasks delegated to the MRDCU, it is responsible for work related to the inclusion of architectural and town-planning objects, objects of garden, park and monumental arts, and other objects on the State Register of Immovable Monuments of Ukraine.
The main body authorized to be the central body of executive power in the sphere of environmental protection is the Ministry of Environmental Protection of Ukraine (MEPU). Its tasks include implementation of the state policy concerning environmental protection, and the efficient use, reproduction and protection of natural resources; the realization of state control over the use and protection of land, environmental security, the creation of reservations, waste products treatment; the formation, protection and use of the environmental network; and ensuring the conduct of geological research and efficient use of mineral resources.
With the purpose of protecting the environment and traditional nature of inhabited places, these places are registered in the List of Historical Inhabited Places of Ukraine. The MCU proposes places to be included on the List of Historical Inhabited Places of Ukraine (cities and villages) and their inclusion on the list is approved by the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine according to the Resolution of the Cabinet of Ministers of 26.07.2001 № 878. There are 401 inhabited places identified on the list.
According to the Law of Ukraine “On protection of the cultural heritage”, objects of cultural heritage have to be registered in the State Register of immovable monuments of Ukraine in the categories of national and local significance and according to their archaeological, aesthetic, ethnological, historical, artistic and scientific value. The procedure for defining the category of objects of the cultural heritage has been approved by the decision of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine on 27.12.2001 #1760. After including an immovable object in the Register all its elements gain the legal status of the monument. Recently, the Ministry of Culture of Ukraine has made the decision to develop and introduce the electronic register of cultural heritage, as tangible and intangible.
As of 1 January 2016, there are 130 007 monuments of cultural heritage (of national and local importance) listed in Ukraine (compared to 2010 the number has reduced due to the annex of Crimea and partial occupation of Donets and Luhansk regions), among them are:
- 69 866 archaeological monuments;
- 53 456 historic monuments;
- 2 434 monuments of monumental art;
- 2 941 monuments of architecture and city building;
- 272 monuments of the garden art;
- 4 landscape monuments; and
- 11 monuments of science and technology (data of the statistical report of 2015).
According to the state budget of Ukraine, the expenditure on the reservations of national importance are made from the state budget of Ukraine. It could be stated that in many municipalities of Ukraine the issue of managing monuments of local importance is not executed satisfactorily, with a great number of monuments dilapidating, especially in the countryside and in small towns. The main problems are the absence of specialists and wrong administrative decisions on local level. Besides, according to the Accounting Chamber Report of 24.11.2015, N 9-1, the Ministry of Culture of Ukraine, in the period 2013-2015, used inefficient resources for protecting cultural heritage which led to the fact that about 20 per cent of monuments in reservesі (193) are in critical and unsatisfactory condition; more than 40 per cent (329 monuments) require restoration.
In 2016, at the 11th Intergovernmental Committee of UNESCO for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage, the decision was approved to inscribe Cossack’s songs of Dnipropetrovsk Region on the List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding. It became the second element of the intangible cultural heritage of Ukraine inscribed on UNESCO lists which puts a clear task before Ukraine – to develop and implement special safeguarding policies and programmes. As it is said in UNESCO Committee decision, it is an obligation of the submitting State “to define clear priority areas and clear sequencing of activities in the elaboration and implementation of the proposed safeguarding plan and budget”.
The Ministry of Culture of Ukraine had prepared by September 2017 the necessary documents for a Presidential Edict to announce 2018 year as the Year of Ukrainian Cultural Heritage which will coincide with the Year of European Heritage announced by the Council of European Union and European Parliament (see chapter 1.1).
The Draft State Budget of Ukraine 2018 envisages the essential increase in funding of the Ukrainian National Remembrance Institute (by 2.15% up to UAH 57.4 million), which should have a positive impact. On 18 November 2015, the Cabinet of Ministers decreed to establish the Memorial Complex of the Heavenly Hundred Heroes – Museum of the Revolution of Dignity. The purpose of the museum is to show Ukraine’s path to freedom. This includes the Ukrainian War of Independence in 1917-1921, the Cossacks, and many other related topics. It will also be a platform for lectures. One lecture relates to Lessons of Freedom, which provides lessons on freedom to senior students in schools, trains teachers and provides interactive lessons for children. Ukraine’s Ministry of Culture has announced a competition for the best project proposal for the National Memorial Complex of Heavenly Hundred Heroes - the Museum of Revolution of Dignity. The participants of the competition must present the project proposal of the memorial space in memory of the Heavenly Hundred Heroes, develop a project proposal for the building of Museum of the Revolution of Dignity, which should have museum and cultural and educational functions, and develop a public space as a component of the complex. It is planned to hold an exhibition of projects in the summer of 2018.
For more information, see
European Heritage Network: Country profile of the Ukraine
This information will be published as soon as possible.
This information will be published as soon as possible.
This information will be published as soon as possible.
Last update: November, 2017
There is no clear definition of the cultural industries in Ukraine. The first mention of "cultural industries" appeared in the Law of Ukraine on the Conceptual Framework of the Public Cultural Policy of Ukraine (2005). The Law on Culture, which had been under discussion for 7 years and was adopted by the Parliament in December 2010 (signed by the President in January, 2011), has no mention of "cultural industries". The Law offers the following formulation: "cultural wealth is goods and services produced in the course of activities in the sphere of culture to satisfy cultural needs of citizens (books, audio and visual products (music recordings), works of art and documents on new information-carrying media, crafts, theatre and circus performances, concerts, cultural and educational services, etc.)".
Creative and cultural industries are mentioned in the Long-term Development Strategy of Ukrainian Culture:
- support of innovations, new knowledge and skills, creative industries matching challenges of the 21st century; and
- state policy for creating national cultural product envisages the establishment of efficient professional inter-sectoral interaction on all levels for the development of modern cultural industries to promote common values, and establish new partnerships.
In 2017, within the project “Bridges for civic activity” funded by the EU, there were 3 forums of the creative industries, Creative industries for local development, Creative industries for active life, and Creative industries: Ukraine for the world. The forums were organized by the Charitable Ukrainian Foundation “Pomogaem” (city of Dnipro, http://uacharity.com/), established in 2009 by volunteers to resolve health, social, economic and cultural problems of modern Ukrainian society. The Foundation acts in partnership with regional and national authorities (Ministry of Culture, Oblast State Administration), professional associations (Ukrainian Library Association), as well as with civil society organizations (Centre for Cultural Management (Lviv), Kultura Medialna (Dnipro).
At the same time, the Ministry of Culture organized two forums on cultural and creative industries in Kyiv in 2017. The forums have provided direction indicators for CCI programme development. The Ministry of Culture jointly with Verkhovna Rada Committee on Culture and Religions prepared amendments to the Law on Culture with a definition of the term “cultural and creative industries”.
The establishment of the Ukrainian Book Institute in 2017 and the adoption of the Law On Ukrainian Cultural Endowment are creating favourable conditions for cultural industries development in Ukraine.
Ukrainian cinematography has been steadily developing, receiving state support in 2016-2017 as a separate budget programme, along with a favourable legislative environment and tax exemption policy. The quality of domestic productions has earned recognition in the form of multiple prestigious international prizes including Cannes Film Festival, Berlin International Film Festival and Venice International Film Festival. The film industry is already a significant contributor to the national economy; 15 600 people work in the film industry and the contribution of these activities to GDP is UAH 1.1 billion.
In 2015 12.95% of all nationally distributed films were of domestic origin, including co-productions. 263 films were distributed nation-wide across Ukraine, of which 224 were foreign, six were co-productions, and 23 were domestically produced. The overwhelming majority of distributed films were foreign: 85.2%.
According to the Ukrainian State Film Agency (USFA), since 2014, 42 domestic films, including 7 fiction films, 6 feature shorts, 8 animation films 21 documentaries were produced. The Ukrainian State Film Agency rejected or abolished state registration of 230 films (TV series) produced by the Russian Federation on the basis of the Order of the Ministry of Culture of Ukraine of 30.12.2016, #275 “On Addition (Renovation) of the List of Persons Creating Danger to National Security following the Call of the State Security Service of Ukraine”. The Expert Commission on distribution and demonstration at the USFA analysed 937 films and TV series, and declined 483 films and TV series from those analysed, almost all produced in the Russian Federation, basing this decision on the above mentioned Order of the Ministry of Culture of Ukraine.
As Philip Ilyenko, head of the State Film Agency, stated, more than 630 films and TV series produced in the Russian Federation are prohibited for demonstration in Ukraine by November 2017; it defends the Ukrainian information space and stimulates the production of Ukrainian content (https://www.facenews.ua/news/2017/385010/).
Table 1: State Budget expenses for film production and distribution, in million UAH, 2010-2018
2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 project | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Budget expenses | 30.0 | 110.7 | 145.9 | 146.3 | 74.1 | 136.7 | 255.8 | 514.5 | 518.2 |
Source: State Treasury of Ukraine, 2015, Parliament Committee on Culture and Religions, 2017.
According to the data of the Book Chamber of Ukraine, the number of books (number of titles) in the Ukrainian language increased by 5.38% in 2017 (11 months) compared with 2016; as for Russian language books, their number of titles decreased by 2.7%.
Last update: November, 2017
Please find the available information on this subject in 3.5.1.
Last update: November, 2017
Please find the available information on this subject in 3.5.1.
Last update: November, 2017
Please find the available information on this subject in 3.5.1.
Last update: November, 2017
Please find the available information on this subject in 3.5.1.
Last update: November, 2017
Please find the available information on this subject in 3.5.1.