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Pozycja Bezpieczeństwo. Teoria i Praktyka 2023, nr 3 (LII) The causes, course and possible consequences of the Russian-Ukrainian war from the perspective of Poland, France and New Zealand(Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM, 2023) Lasoń, Marcin; Issa, Alex; Johanson, Terry; Pawłuszko, Tomasz; Jureńczyk, Łukasz; Mickiewicz, Piotr; Kasprzycki, Daniel D.; Czermińska, Małgorzata; Hlebowicz, Sylwia; Młynarski, Tomasz; Kalos, Aram; Welc, Henry; Kodalazian, Carene; El-Bazzal, Nathalie; Greener, Bethan K.; Wood, Aaron; Barney, Andrew R.; Sanders, TetyanaIntroduction: "This issue of Security: Theory and Practice represents unique international cooperation among the academics of Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski Krakow University, ESSEC Business School, and Massey University. Three editors Marcin Lasoń (editor in chief), Alex Issa (editor in France), and Lieutenant Colonel (retired) Terence Johanson (editor in New Zealand) gathered carefully selected authors to share their expertise and personal views on the Russian-Ukrainian war."(...)Pozycja Untangling the Russian-Ukrainian Knot: Representations of the neo-imperialistic Russian political discourse and its analysis in the Polish press materials in the period of 2013–2014 and 2022(Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM, 2023) Hlebowicz, SylwiaMilitary conflicts have symbolic foundations. Be it religion, identity, values, or language, they all may serve as ‘weapons of war’ that either help to rationalize the military action or mobilize the nation. The Russian-Ukrainian war is no exception. The ongoing conflict exceeds the premises of a geo-political game or a socioeconomic ambition and proves itself to be deeply entrenched in a cultural conflict between the two countries. Therefore, the thrust of the paper is to explore the cultural-historical context of the Russia-Ukraine war.Russian imperialistic desires have been whetted by neo-romantic historical narration for the past two decades. The article comprises of two parts – historical and empirical. When the former depicts the history of direct imperial Russian rule over Ukraine, then the latter is a critical overview of Polish press materials commenting on the change in the Russian political discourse concerning Ukraine in the years 2013–2014 and 2022. Such an analysis sheds different light on the current Russian-Ukrainian war, but it also indicates that the conflict we are witnessing now has been carefully prepared on both military and socio-political levels.