Kyiv University of Culture bets on a creative-business degree to widen wartime admissions
A new Creative and Business degree at Kyiv University of Culture opens admissions on 1 July, an attempt to keep classrooms full while the war reshapes what students are willing to study.

Kyiv National University of Culture and Arts will begin accepting applications for a new Creative and Business degree on 1 July, the institution said in a 26 June 2026 notice distributed through its official channels. The intake is timed to the start of Ukraine's main university admissions round and lands in the same week the country's higher-education sector reports its fifth wartime enrolment cycle, with applicants now able to register through a state electronic cabinet and, in this case, sit a creative contest as part of the entry process.
The pitch, plainly stated
The programme is being marketed to prospective students who, the university says, are looking for a hybrid track that combines creative disciplines with the business training typically associated with management or economics degrees. The notice, circulated via the university's Telegram channel, frames the new offering as both a response to sustained wartime demand for flexible credentials and an attempt to compete with the more established technical and IT tracks that have dominated Ukrainian higher education since 2022. The application window opens on 1 July, with the creative contest — a long-standing feature of arts-adjacent admissions in Ukraine — taking place after electronic registration closes.
A sector under wartime pressure
Higher education in Ukraine has been operating under compounding strain since the full-scale invasion began. Universities in frontline regions have been displaced, destroyed, or forced into hybrid models. Disrupted academic years, mobilised staff, and the steady draw of male students into the armed forces have shrunk traditional applicant pools. At the same time, the country's IT and engineering faculties have absorbed the bulk of new investment from international partners and from a private sector that is itself trying to keep its workforce inside Ukraine. Against that backdrop, a creative-business track reads as a deliberate attempt to capture the part of the market that does not want a pure technical degree but still wants a credential with labour-market value.
The countervailing read
There is a less generous interpretation. Critics of Ukraine's pre-war higher-education sector have long argued that creative and cultural studies programmes in the country overproduced graduates for a labour market that simply did not need them, pushing many into underpaid freelance work, emigrating, or shifting to adjacent commercial roles. A new degree that bundles the creative and business halves, on this reading, is less an innovation than a repackaging of an old imbalance. University administrators tend to counter that the wartime economy has, in fact, expanded the commercial market for cultural production — gaming, film, post-production for international streamers, creative services for defence-sector communication, and the kind of soft-power work that the state has been investing in as part of its long-term diplomatic posture.
What is actually new
The notice does not specify tuition fees, scholarship provision, or how many seats the new track will offer. It also does not name the partner faculties inside the university that will deliver the business component, or whether the programme will be taught in Ukrainian, English, or both — a meaningful question for an institution that already markets itself to international applicants. What the notice does establish is the calendar: an electronic cabinet opens 1 July, the creative contest follows the application window, and the institution is publicly tying this intake to the broader wartime admissions cycle rather than treating it as an off-cycle addition.
The structural frame
The interesting question is not whether one Kyiv university is adding a degree. It is what the pattern of new degree offerings across the country says about the sort of graduate the wartime state and the wartime private sector are asking universities to produce. A decade ago, the dominant template was a narrow specialism — Ukrainian philology, library science, museum studies — backed by a public-sector employer. The newer template is a portfolio degree, one that takes the cultural sector's training and bolts on the language of management, marketing, and digital revenue. That shift mirrors what has happened in Poland and the Baltic states after EU accession, when cultural and creative-industries programmes were upgraded into engines of soft-power export and urban regeneration. Ukraine, which is now in a different kind of geopolitical opening, is reaching for the same toolkit in a different context.
Stakes
If the new track works, it gives the university a defensible enrolment line in a shrinking market, gives the cultural sector a more commercially literate cohort of graduates, and gives the state a soft-power pipeline it can lean on as reconstruction funding flows in. If it does not, the institution will have spent scarce administrative capacity on a hybrid programme that the labour market reads as neither a clean creative qualification nor a clean business one, and the country's higher-education sector will be a little further behind on the technical specialisms it actually needs. The first indication of which way the bet lands will be in the number of completed e-cabinet applications by the end of the registration window.
What remains uncertain
The university's announcement does not specify the size of the new cohort, the language of instruction, the awarding of dual credentials, or the involvement of any external industry partners. The sources available to Monexus do not address the question of how the programme is being funded, whether international donors are involved, or how the creative contest will be calibrated for applicants whose portfolios were disrupted by the war. These details will matter when assessing whether the degree is a serious structural addition to Ukraine's higher-education offer or a tactical enrolment-management move.
Desk note: Monexus has framed this as a higher-education and labour-market story, not a culture-war story. The wire treatment of wartime Ukrainian universities has tended to focus on displacement and destruction; the more durable editorial question is what is being built in the institutions that are still standing.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/uniannet/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyiv_National_University_of_Culture_and_Arts
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Ukraine
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative_industries