Simon Schlegel

Simon Schlegel

Senior Analyst, Ukraine

Crisis Group Role

Simon joined Crisis Group in February 2022 as Senior Analyst for Ukraine. He conducts research on the war in Ukraine and its far-reaching political, humanitarian and economic consequences. His work focuses on identifying the small spaces for compromise or improvement on the ground.

Professional Background

Prior to joining Crisis Group, Simon worked for a humanitarian aid project in war-torn Donbas. In an earlier phase of the war, he also worked for Germany's Civil Peace Service program in Kyiv in a project that documented human rights violations in Donbas. Simon holds a PhD in Social Anthropology that he gained while working at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle, Germany, with a thesis on the history of ethnic boundaries in rural south-western Ukraine. He has worked as a researcher at Loughborough University (UK), where he focused on commemorative politics in Kyiv. He studied social anthropology and Slavic languages at the University of Zurich.

Areas of Expertise

  • Nationalities policies
  • Language policies
  • Commemorative politics
  • Clientelism
  • Humanitarian aid

Languages

  • German
  • Russian
  • Ukrainian

Select Publications

2021. “Identity Politics as Pretext and Prediction — Vote Buying and Group Boundaries in Ukraine.” Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization 29 (2): 113–33.

2021. (with Alena Pfoser) “Uncovering Disciplined Pasts: Tour Guiding through Kyiv’s Changing Place Names.” History and Anthropology. https://doi.org/10.1080/02757206.2021.1881082

2020. (with Alena Pfoser) “Navigating Contested Memories in a Commercialised Setting: Conflict Avoidance Strategies in Kyiv City Tour Guiding.” International Journal of Heritage Studies 27 (5): 487–99. https://doi.org/10.1080/13527258.2020.1821235.

2019. Making Ethnicity in Southern Bessarabia — Tracing the Histories of an Ambiguous Concept in a Contested Land. Leiden and Boston: Brill.

2018. “Soviet Bureaucracy as a Category Coining Machine: Ethnicity, Ethnography, and the ‘Primordial Trap.’” Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society 4 (2): 1–26.

In The News

4 tra 2024
Ukraine can rely on a decentralized network of manufacturing sites, which is essential in a country where Russia can hit anywhere with drones and missiles. Sky News Arabia

Simon Schlegel

Senior Analyst, Ukraine
10 velj 2024
The main strength of [the Ukrainian] government has been its strong communication both with international partners, whose support is so important, but also with its own p... Vox

Simon Schlegel

Senior Analyst, Ukraine
15 pro 2023
Moscow's strategy of waiting for an erosion of European unity over Ukraine could yet prove a miscalculation. DW

Simon Schlegel

Senior Analyst, Ukraine
13 lis 2023
If [war in Gaza] morphs into a long, regional conflict, resource constraints on Ukraine may grow in time. Anadolu Agency

Simon Schlegel

Senior Analyst, Ukraine
24 lip 2023
If Russian soldiers feel their commanders are not in control, their trenches will be much easier to take for advancing Ukrainian troops. The Hill

Simon Schlegel

Senior Analyst, Ukraine

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