The lessons on media resilience draw on extensive research conducted by a cross-functional group of experts from media, government, civil society, and academia, grounded in Ukraine’s lived experience of operating under conditions of full-scale war. Supported by International Media Support through the REACH programme, the research moves beyond individual success stories to identify recurring patterns and shared challenges that can inform preparedness and response strategies well beyond the Ukrainian context. Its purpose is to help media ecosystems translate crisis experience into practical frameworks that strengthen resilience before, during, and after major disruptions.
As Europe, including Denmark, confronts growing security threats, insights from Ukrainian media leaders highlight the importance of preparation long before a crisis unfolds. Ukraine entered the invasion with no time to plan, forcing decisions to be made amid evacuation, bombardment, and territorial loss. This experience underscores that preparedness is a form of responsible governance rather than alarmism, as time invested before a crisis directly affects institutional continuity, public trust, and human safety once conflict begins.
The research also shows that people, not technology, form the core of media resilience. Journalists in Ukraine continued working under extreme pressure, often while facing personal trauma and exhaustion. Sustaining media operations during a long war required leadership that prioritised physical and psychological safety, acknowledged burnout as inevitable, and treated rest and recovery as essential systems. Institutional survival depended less on heroic endurance than on protecting people so they could continue their work over time.
Leadership emerged as another decisive factor. In conditions of uncertainty, teams relied on leaders who were visible, ethical, and personally accountable. Clear communication, moral guidance, and presence mattered more than flawless decisions, while avoidance or silence quickly eroded trust. Under prolonged stress, trust in leadership became an operational necessity rather than an abstract value.
The Ukrainian experience further revealed that media infrastructure itself becomes a military target in modern warfare. Broadcast towers, studios, servers, and journalists were deliberately attacked, making decentralisation and redundancy critical to survival. Media organisations that could operate without fixed buildings, switch platforms, and maintain backup power and connectivity were better able to continue informing the public when the information space was most fragile.
Solidarity across the media ecosystem also proved essential. Competing outlets, regulators, and oversight institutions cooperated by sharing resources, facilities, and support, enabling smaller and regional media to survive. This cooperation was effective because relationships and trust were established before the crisis, demonstrating that resilience depends on pre-existing frameworks of collaboration as much as on editorial independence.
At the same time, the research highlights the need to defend freedom of expression even under intense security pressure. Emergency measures can easily harden into lasting restrictions if left unchecked. In Ukraine, collective action by journalists, civil society, and international partners played a key role in resisting excessive censorship and preserving access to information and accountability during wartime.
Finally, the lessons stress that recovery must begin before the war ends. Documenting crimes, preserving evidence, preparing ethical standards for dealing with trauma, rebuilding professional pathways, and planning sustainable business models are all part of resilience. Ukraine’s experience shows that resilience is not only about surviving conflict, but about the capacity to recover, confront the past truthfully, and rebuild media institutions that societies can trust in the future.
Together, these insights demonstrate that media resilience in long-term war is a continuous process rooted in people, ethics, solidarity, and responsibility. For Europe, the Ukrainian case delivers a clear warning and opportunity: the time to prepare is now, before crisis removes that choice.







