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  • By: Graphene Flagship
  • Graphene Flagship
  • Publishing date: 08 April 2022
  • By: Graphene Flagship
  • Graphene Flagship
  • Publishing date: 08 April 2022

Letter from Scientists of Ukrainian, Russian, and Belarusian descent to Governments and Science Funding Organisations

A call for governments and funding agencies to support the Ukrainian scientists affected by the war in Ukraine.

Among three million people who have already left the war zone in Ukraine and are seeking refuge in other countries, there are many talented scientists who had to flee to save their lives and the lives of their families. Their immediate move to established research institutions in Western countries would not only bring them to safety but also greatly benefit science and engineering worldwide. The past contributions of Ukrainians, who escaped prior wars, have been large and multifaceted. Just consider Igor Sikorsky, who was born in Kyiv in 1889. He shares the same alma mater, Kyiv Polytechnic, which proudly displays Sikorsky’s name nowadays, with some of the signatories of this letter. He immigrated to the USA in 1919, founded the Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation in 1923, developed the first ocean-crossing flying boats and the first American helicopter. Another prominent scientist, Stepan Timoshenko was born near Chernigov in 1878 and later immigrated to the USA and became the father of engineering mechanics and theory of elasticity underpinning modern mechanical engineering.

We, scientists of Ukrainian, Russian and Belarusian descent, currently working in the USA, UK, Canada and Ukraine, resolutely condemn aggression against Ukraine and call for the Russian government to stop the military operation in Ukraine.  We call for far-reaching support to Ukrainian scientists who have been deprived of an opportunity to perform research at their home institutions and study at their home universities, because of destruction and death brought by the war in Ukraine.  In order to protect lives and intellectual potential of Ukrainian scientists, we request immediate actions by our governments, science funding agencies, non-profit organizations, and private foundations:

  • Establish fast track visa processes for Ukrainian scientists and their families that short-cut slow routines in scientific institutions and consulates;
  • Establish emergency funding programs to support temporary research positions for Ukrainian scientists for their immediate relocation to Western universities and research institutes;
  • Provide additional funding for continuing study and training of Ukrainian students and post-docs;
  • Open the door for fast track in obtaining a residence status for Ukrainian scientists and engineers.

It might be a long journey before science and engineering in independent Ukraine will flourish again.  We are confident that it will eventually happen.  Many saved scientists will go back to rebuild Ukraine and some others will stay here to make our countries stronger and support close collaboration with Ukraine.  We believe that the end of dark ages imposed by Putin on Russia will also come to an end. His military defeat in Ukraine will hasten the end of temporary kleptocracy and facilitate the free flow of worldwide scientific exchange and collaboration of free people from all the countries.  

Dr. Alexander Volkov
President of Council of Young Investigators of National Academy of Science of Ukraine, Kyiv, Ukraine

Nicholas A. Kotov
Irving Langmuir Distinguished University Professor in Chemical Sciences and Engineering, University of Michigan, USA; Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry

Eugenia Kumacheva
Distinguished University Professor, University of Toronto, Canada; Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and UK Royal Society

Andre K. Geim
Regius Professor of Physics and Royal Society Research Professor at the National Graphene Institute, University of Manchester, UK, 2010 Nobel Prize Laureate

Oleg Gang
Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, Columbia University and Brookhaven National Laboratory, USA; Fellow of American Physical Society

Dmytro F. Perepichka
William C. MacDonald Professor of Chemistry; Chair, Department of Chemistry, McGill University, Canada

Oleg D. Lavrentovich
Trustees Research Professor, Kent State University, USA; Fellow of the American Physical Society and International Society for Optical Engineering

Vladimir Tsukruk
Regents Professor, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA; Fellow of American Physical Society, Materials Research Society, American Chemical Society, and Fulbright Fellow

Yury Gogotsi
Charles T. and Ruth M. Bach Distinguished University Professor, Director, A.J. Drexel Nanomaterials Institute, Drexel University, USA

Konstantin Novoselov
Langworthy Pofessor
School of Physics and Astronomy
University of Manchester, UK; 2010 Nobel Prize Laureate

Dmitri V. Talapin
Ernest DeWitt Burton Distinguished Service Professor
Department of Chemistry and James Franck Institute, University of Chicago, USA

Alexei A. Kornyshev
Professor of Chemical Physics, Department of Chemistry, Imperial College, UK
Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry, the Institute of Physics, and Danish Academy

Igor Luzinov
Kentwool Distinguished Professor
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Clemson University, South Carolina, USA

We, scientists of Ukrainian, Russian and Belarusian descent, currently working in the USA, UK, Canada and Ukraine, resolutely condemn aggression against Ukraine and call for the Russian government to stop the military operation in Ukraine.


Sign the letter


Those wishing to express their support for this letter can sign by following the link below.

Author bio


Graphene Flagship
Graphene Flagship

Bringing together 118 academic and industrial partners in 12 research and innovation projects and 1 coordination and support project, the Graphene Flagship initiative will continue to advance Europe’s strategic autonomy in technologies that rely on graphene and other 2D materials. The initiative, which builds on the previous 10-years of the Graphene Flagship, is funded by the European Commission’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme. The 2D-Experimental Pilot Line, addressing the challenges of upscaling 2D material production processes for the semiconductor industry, is another key component of the Graphene Flagship eco-system.