BASIS OF LEGAL REGULATION OF SOCIAL PROTECTION OF PARTICIPANTS IN COMBAT OPERATIONS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.32844/ibpala-2025-4.14Keywords:
combatants, social protection, legal regulation, martial law, defense of the Motherland, international experience, social policy, legislation, benefits.Abstract
The article examines the legal principles of social protection of combatants (hereinafter referred to
as the UBD) in modern Ukraine, focusing on the consequences of the full-scale aggression of the Russian
Federation and the legal regime of martial law. The evolution of statuses (from “ATO participant” and
“JO participant” to the expansion of the list of participants after 2022) and the impact of these changes on
access to guarantees are considered. The normative basis is the Constitution of Ukraine, special laws on
the status of veterans and on the social and legal protection of military personnel, including combatants,
supplemented by by-laws, codes and local programs. The key support instruments are revealed: medical
care and rehabilitation, housing and land mechanisms, tax benefits, employment guarantees, educational and
f
inancial programs, and services for the families of defenders. The factors of system changes are outlined –
digitalization of procedures, unified registers, e-certificates, interdepartmental data exchange – that reduce
bureaucratic costs and increase targeting. At the same time, systemic flaws are identified: fragmentation
of secondary legislation, regional disparities, uneven funding, lack of psychosocial rehabilitation, and weak
implementation control mechanisms.
A brief comparative review of the practices of the USA, Poland, and Israel demonstrates the effectiveness
of models that combine complexity, stable budgets, and a developed digital infrastructure for supporting
veterans. On this basis, the codification of a “veteran” array of norms, the deployment of e-services (electronic
certificate, veteran’s office), unified rehabilitation routes, a target support fund, and public monitoring are
proposed. It is concluded that the transition from the logic of one-time payments to a long-term partnership
between the state, a participant in hostilities, and the community will increase the transparency, effectiveness,
and sustainability of reintegration policies

