On May 15, 2024, the final meeting of the student research group of the Department of Theory and History of the State and Law "Hlocksydra" was held at the Faculty of Law, the participants of which are students of higher education in the 1st year of the specialty 081 "Law".
Moderator of the event, head of the student research group, Viktoriya Cherevatyuk, proposed the topic "The war of Muscovy against Ukraine: historical and legal aspect" for discussion.
The meeting took place in the format of a round table, which made possible to focuse on the most important aspects of the discussed problem.The moderator emphasized that history, including the history of the state and law, is a moving matter, which in the process of understanding deepens and is enriched with new conclusions, more thorough and more instructive. "In contrast to the lies and falsifications of the Kremlin, we must rethink our own history, decontaminate it from these falsifications introduced into it by Catherine and later distorters of distorted reality," she said.
During the round table, the first-year students repeatedly emphasized that Ukrainian lands, resources, and history have always been the subject of encroachment by our aggressive neighbor, and the thesis of "fraternal nations" remains only a myth, which was used only for the purpose of manipulation and propaganda.
Interesting and creative reports of the members of the group helped the participants of the event to better understand the events of a hundred and ten years ago, to deepen their knowledge of the history of Ukrainian statehood.
At the end of the meeting, the best reports were noted, in particular, Igor Hubulov (PR-101B) "A modern view of the liberation struggles and the struggle against Bolshevism 1917-1922", Yulia Verzhikovska (PR-101B) "The Kholodnoyarsk Republic - a heroic page of the Ukrainian people's struggle for statehood" and Rostyslav Letkiv (PR-101B) "The Second World War for Ukraine: a new understanding".
Summarizing the effectiveness of the group's work, Victoria Cherevatyuk noted: "As an initial form of mastering the skills of scientific research by future specialists in the field of law, work in the group stimulates the active creative work of first-year students, and also allows you to identify the most gifted among young scientists and contribute to their scientific growth and development of creative thinking." .