Abstract
The paper presents the results of bibliometric analysis of publications that were co-written by authors affiliated with Ukrainian and Russian institutions in 2007-2016 according to Scopus. Results of the study show that Ukrainian and Russian scientists have not refused to carry out joint research in major international projects, but a decrease in the number of works, written by Ukrainian and Russian scientific institutions staff members in 2016, provides evidence on the threat and negative impact the Russian military intervention brings to cooperation in science. The findings are important for generating the science development programs in Ukraine.
Highlights
Collaboration among researchers from different countries simplifies acquiring of new knowledge, expands opportunities for further use of research results, and facilitates the effective sharing of skills, competences, and resources
The Ukrainian science has directly suffered from the Crimea occupation by the armed forces of the Russian Federation in 2014 and the subsequent Russian armed aggression in the east of Ukraine
An analysis of the scientific publications of Russian researchers issued in international coauthorship in 1999—2008 has shown that Ukraine is the only out of all post-Soviet countries among the top twenty countries: it was ranked the 12th in 1999—2003 and 15th in 2004—2008; the share of joint publications of Ukrainian and Russian scholars in the total number of Russian publications co-authored with international colleagues made up 3.7%, in 1999—2003, and 3.8%, in 2004— 2008 [5, 13—14]
Summary
Collaboration among researchers from different countries simplifies acquiring of new knowledge, expands opportunities for further use of research results, and facilitates the effective sharing of skills, competences, and resources. An analysis of the scientific publications of Russian researchers issued in international coauthorship in 1999—2008 has shown that Ukraine is the only out of all post-Soviet countries among the top twenty countries: it was ranked the 12th in 1999—2003 and 15th in 2004—2008; the share of joint publications of Ukrainian and Russian scholars in the total number of Russian publications co-authored with international colleagues made up 3.7%, in 1999—2003, and 3.8%, in 2004— 2008 [5, 13—14].
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