About This Article
This is an AI-generated summary of a research paper. The original authors did not write or review this article. See full disclosure ↓
Overview
This study examines sociocultural projections of social cohesion through theoretical analysis and ontological-epistemological frameworks. The research identifies foundational principles governing social cohesion architecture during periods of societal stress, including sociocultural integrity, systemicity, homogeneity-heterogeneity dynamics, and the mediating role of sociocultural environments in actor interactions.
Methods and approach
The investigation employed comprehensive theoretical methods encompassing analysis, synthesis, generalization, and analogy. Theoretical modeling was applied alongside ontological and epistemological perspectives to identify and structure sociocultural projections of social cohesion. The approach integrates examination of natural and artificial sociocultural factors influencing cohesion within societal systems.
Results
A model of social cohesion has been constructed defining it as a state of dynamic unification enabling society to address pressing challenges. The study demonstrates that social cohesion functions as a guiding principle for preserving statehood amid profound transformations of sociocultural foundations. Social cohesion emerges through interactions and mutual influences among societal actors operating within the sociocultural environment, with bidirectional relationships between actors and the environment itself.
Implications
The sociocultural approach reconceptualizes social cohesion beyond static definitions, positioning it as a dynamic phenomenon contingent upon the quality and character of interactions within sociocultural environments. This framework provides theoretical grounding for understanding cohesion mechanisms during periods of institutional or social transformation, particularly relevant to contexts requiring statehood preservation.
Disclosure
- Research title: SOCIAL COHESION OF SOCIETY: SOCIO-CULTURAL PROJECTIONS
- Authors: Nataliia Dovgan, С.Л. Кравчук, Vitalii Dukhnevych
- Publication date: 2026-01-22
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.18623/rvd.v23.n2.4514
- OpenAlex record: View
- PDF: Download
- Image credit: Photo by Small Group Network on Unsplash (Source • License)
- Disclosure: This post was generated by artificial intelligence. The original authors did not write or review this post.


