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Sustaining Ukraine’s anti-corruption future: The paths that lie ahead

Making anti-corruption sustainable for the future means maintaining an open and collaborative policy arena – the public space in which decisions are shaped and made – that is protected from excessive political intrusion. Ukraine must encourage broad-based domestic ownership of this arena and ensure the meaningful inclusion of a wide range of domestic actors, beyond formal officeholders and a narrow circle of NGOs, to set a collaborative, shared anti-corruption agenda.

15 June 2026
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Sustaining Ukraine’s anti-corruption future: The paths that lie ahead

Main points

  • Ukraine’s anti-corruption agenda is currently thriving and complex, but its sustainability depends on how deeply that agenda is embedded in Ukraine’s evolving political and social dynamics.
  • Enduring reform requires more than plans and strategies; it depends on continuous adaptation of institutions and norms that is shaped by context. The analysis reframes anti-corruption as a ‘policy arena’ structured by interaction between competing actors and interests.
  • Ukraine’s future anti-corruption trajectory can be understood through four alternative policy arenas with different levels of stability and risk. The most resilient pathway is an open, adaptive ‘maturity and innovation’ arena that limits undue political interference.
  • This outcome depends on a favourable political economy, conceptualised here through a ’kite model’ of shifting influence among key actors. An important risk for Ukraine’s anti-corruption agenda is institutional and political isolation, where the sector becomes siloed, weak in delivering societal impact, and unable to counterbalance concentrated executive power within the kite model.
  • Long-term effectiveness ultimately hinges on broad-based domestic ownership that embeds integrity across state and society rather than relying on external drivers. To help achieve this, practitioners could: 1) Shape the domestic political economy using the kite model as a diagnostic. 2) Develop a shared domestic vision for anti-corruption. 3) Further expand anti-corruption in sectors. 4) Support social capacity to strengthen the anti-corruption agenda. 5) Iternationally-led processes should be mediated locally. 6) Bring the anti-corruption policy arena together.

Cite this publication


Jackson, D.; Huss, O.; Keudel, O. 2026. Sustaining Ukraine’s anti-corruption future: The paths that lie ahead . Bergen: U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre, Chr. Michelsen Institute (U4 Issue 2026:7)

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About the authors

Dr. David Jackson leads U4’s thematic work on informal contexts of corruption. His research explores how an understanding of social norms, patron-client politics, and nonstate actors can lead to anti-corruption interventions that are better suited to context. He is the author of various book chapters and journal articles on governance issues and holds degrees from Oxford University, the Hertie School of Governance, and the Freie Universität Berlin.

Oksana Huss

Dr. Oksana Huss’s areas of expertise cover (anti-)corruption and social movements, as well as open government and digital technologies. Oksana obtained her doctoral degree at the Institute for Development and Peace in Germany and has held several research fellowships in Canada, France, the Netherlands, and Sweden. She has consulted forinternational organisations, such as the Council of Europe, EU, UNESCO, and UNODC. Oksana is a co-founder of the Interdisciplinary Corruption Research Network and author of the book How Corruption and Anti-Corruption Policies Sustain Hybrid Regimes: Strategies of political domination under Ukraine’s presidents in 1994-2014. 

Oleksandra Keudel

Dr. Oleksandra Keudel is an assistant professor at the Department of Public Policy and Governance at Kyiv School of Economics. In her research, she focuses on local democracy, social movements, and civic engagement as well as business-political arrangements at the local level in Ukraine. Oleksandra is also a consultant on open government, anti-corruption policies, and public integrity for international organisations(including the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe and IIEP-UNESCO). She holds a PhD in political science from the Free University of Berlin, an MSc in international administration and global governance from the University of Gothenburg, and an MA in international information from the Kyiv Institute of International Relations.

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All views in this text are the author(s)’, and may differ from the U4 partner agencies’ policies.

This work is licenced under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

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