Review of the monograph by Nina Petrukha: ‘RECONFIGURATION OF INVESTMENT SUPPORT AND RESILIENCE FORMATION OF AGRICULTURAL ENTERPRISES IN THE BIOECONOMIC PARADIGM OF THE NEW SECURITY REALITY: METHODOLOGY, DIAGNOSTICS, MODELLING’
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.32782/inclusive_economics.12-33Abstract
The modern understanding of inclusion in economic science has long transcended the narrow interpretation of it merely as the social participation of specific population groups or compensatory policies for vulnerable categories. Increasingly, inclusion is emerging as a fundamental attribute of a mature economic system—one capable not of reproducing barriers, but of dismantling them; not of concentrating resources in limited growth poles, but of ensuring the involvement of a broader range of actors, territories, communities (hromadas), enterprises, and social groups in the processes of creating, distributing, and utilising economic value. In this conceptualisation, inclusivity attains the status of a methodological principle for economic policy, integrating social justice, accessibility, spatial cohesion, food security, and the long-term resilience of the economic system.
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