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Ukraine’s NATO Accession Discourse
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16 June 2026

— Senem Aydın-Düzgit, Professor of International Relations, Sabanci University, Istanbul
A clear finding of this study is that the Ukrainian identity and project of NATO accession correlated strongly with each other over the course of the period under investigation. From the perspective of historiography, a plea to give greater weight to the connection between discourse about a country's self-description and its integration into international structures is a refreshing one. In my view, this is a great strength of this book.
— Martin Aust, Professor of East European History, University of Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia
This book dismantles the teleological reading of Ukraine’s Euro-Atlantic march. Analyzing two decades of Ukrainian elite discourses on NATO, Iryna Zhyrun shows how comprador elites framed the alliance as a ‘civilizing’ cure for the post-Soviet ‘mentality,’ while anti-NATO voices failed to offer compelling alternatives. It highlights the turbulent domestic identity politics that shaped the trajectory toward the war.
— Volodymyr Ishchenko, Research Fellow, Free University of Berlin
Iryna Zhyrun (Author)
Dr. Iryna Zhyrun studied Foreign Languages, Linguistics, and Political Science in Kharkiv, Moscow, and Bonn. She held visiting positions at the University of the North in Barranquilla, Colombia, and Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa, Italy. Her articles and reviews have appeared in, among other outlets, Russian Politics, Nazioni e Regioni, Europe-Asia Studies, and Nations and Nationalism.
Andreas Heinemann-Grüder (Foreword by)
Dr. Andreas Heinemann-Grüder is Professor of Political Science at the University of Bonn.