The impact of legal norms on stimulating innovative activity in the field of sustainable development
Iaroslav Petrunenko 1 * , Oleksii Dniprov 2 , Yaroslav Sydorov 3 4 , Olha Bodnar-Petrovska 5 , Mykhailo Syrotko 1
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1 State Organization “V. Mamutov Institute of Economic and Legal Research of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine”, Kyiv, UKRAINE2 Department of law and Administration, Kyiv National University of Construction and Architecture, Kyiv, UKRAINE3 Department of Civil Law, Zaporizhzhia National University, Zaporizhzhia, UKRAINE 4 Department of Management and Public Administration, Dmytro Motornyi Tavria State Agrotechnological University, Zaporizhzhia, UKRAINE5 Mykolas Romeris University, Vilnius, LITHUANIA* Corresponding Author

Abstract

This study examines the role of legal norms in fostering innovation for sustainable development (SD). The focus of this study is on a comparative emphasis on the European Union (EU) and Ukraine. It analyzes how regulatory designs enable or constrain eco-innovation and evaluates the potential of Ukraine to harmonize its framework with EU standards in the context of post-2022 reconstruction and EU accession. The main sources of the research are the EU green deal and regulation (EU) 2021/2085, and the laws of the country regarding innovation and sustainable energy in Ukraine. The secondary data is borrowed through organizations such as OECD, UNDP, and the World Bank, and also the European Patent Office. The outcome reveals that there is a great variation between the two regions under investigation. More than 70 percent of the difference in innovation performance (measured by patent applications, research and development expenditure, global innovation index rankings, and so on) can be associated with the cohesive and enforceable legal system of the EU, which is supported by programs such as Horizon Europe, whereas Ukraine is only 43%. In the study, bureaucratic inefficiencies and corruption have been noted to be the biggest impediments to the implementation of eco-innovation in Ukraine. The results of this research confirm that the Porter hypothesis applies to the EU, where strong environmental regulation can help to increase innovation; however, they also indicate the weakness of this theory in a transitional economy, where the enforcement capacity is low. Nevertheless, the latest events in Ukraine can promise new perspectives on green reconstruction and eco innovation. The policy suggestions include the fact that Ukraine should modernize the law, incorporate the sustainable development goals, and employ EU-style investment facilitation schemes. These actions might assist in the empowerment of the innovation ecosystem in Ukraine and fast-track its integration with the EU, finally leading to the SD agenda.

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This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Article Type: Research Article

EUR J SUSTAIN DEV RES, Volume 10, Issue 2, 2026, Article No: em0381

https://doi.org/10.29333/ejosdr/18098

Publication date: 01 Apr 2026

Online publication date: 13 Mar 2026

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Article Downloads: 8

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