Ministry of Social Policy of Ukraine

The Ministry of Social Policy of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Міністерство соціальної політики України, romanizedMinisterstvo sotsialnoi polityky Ukrainy), formerly the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy, is the Ukrainian government department responsible for instituting labor relations, family and children, immigration and trafficking, women's rights, children's rights, and humanitarian aid.

Ministry of Social Policy
(Міністерство соціальної політики)
Coat of arms of Ukraine
Agency overview
Formed9 December 2010
Preceding agency
  • Ministry of Labor
    and Social Policy
JurisdictionGovernment of Ukraine
Headquarters8/10, Esplanadna street,
Kyiv, Ukraine, 01001 [1]
Minister responsible
Child agencies
Websitewww.msp.gov.ua/en/ Edit this at Wikidata

Specialization

edit
  • Population Employment and Labor Migration
  • Work Relationships
  • Populations Social Security
  • Family and Children Affairs
  • Rights Security of the Deported by National Identity People which returned to Ukraine
  • Ensuring the equal rights and possibilities for women and men
  • Prevention of violence in family

Structures

edit

The ministry consists of the central body of ministry headed by its leadership composed of a minister, his/hers first deputy, and other deputies in assistance to the minister. Part of ministry compose several state administrations that are specialized in certain field and coordinate operations of government companies.

State agencies

edit
  • State Service for disabled and veterans of Ukraine
  • State Inspection of Ukraine in labor affairs
  • State Employment Service
System of State Social Security
  • State Social Security Fund in case of Unemployment
  • Social Security Fund for temporary Disability
  • Social Security Fund for industrial Accidents
  • Pension Fund of Ukraine

List of ministers

edit
Name of ministry Name of minister Term of office
Start End
Ministry of Social Security Yuriy Lapchinskiy 1918 1918
1918 1920
Nikolai Glebov-Avilov 9 May 1920 29 May 1920
Boris Yeltsin 1920 1921
Varvara Moyrova 1921 1922
Ilya Korneyev 1922 1923
Karl Einstein 1923 1924
Jacob Poznanski March 1924 July 1926
Hryhoriy Pokornyi July 1926 29 May 1934
Ivan Slynko 29 May 1934 1936
Ivan Kudrin 14 March 1936 August 1937
August 1937 June 1938
Yevdokia Lehur June 1938 15 February 1945
Vladimir Muratov 15 February 1945 25 October 1946
Fedir Ananchenko 25 October 1946 11 December 1956
11 December 1956 May 1957
Oleksiy Fedorov May 1957 19 March 1979
Oleksandra Lukyanenko 19 March 1979 17 September 1991
Arkadiy Yershov 17 September 1991 28 August 1996
Petro Ovcharenko 28 August 1996 29 July 1997
Ministry of Labor and Social Policy Mykola Bilobotsky July 1997 June 1998
Ivan Sakhan June 25, 1998 November 30, 2002
Mykhailo Papiev November 30, 2002 February 3, 2005
Viacheslav Kyrylenko February 4, 2005 September 27, 2005
Ivan Sakhan September 27, 2005 August 4, 2006
Mykhailo Papiev August 4, 2006 December 18, 2007
Lyudmyla Denisova December 18, 2007 March 11, 2010
Vasyl Nadraha March 11, 2010 December 9, 2010
Ministry of Social Policy Serhiy Tihipko December 9, 2010 December 24, 2012
Natalia Korolevska December 24, 2012 'February 24, 2014[3]
Lyudmyla Denisova February 27, 2014 December 2, 2014
Pavlo Rozenko[4] December 2, 2014 14 April 2016[2]
Andriy Reva[2] 14 April 2016[2] 29 August 2019
Yuliya Sokolovska 29 August 2019 4 March 2020
Maryna Lazebna 4 March 2020 present

List of ministers of Labor

edit
Name of ministry Name of minister Term of office
Start End
Russian plenipotentiary representative in Ukraine Nikolai Glebov-Avilov 9 May 1920 January 1921
People's Commissariat of Labor Omelyan Horbachov August 1924 23 November 1925
Kyrylo Sukhomlyn December 1925 January 1927
Kostiantyn Hulyi March 1927 20 April 1932
Ivan Vyrostkov 20 April 1932 1933
Ministry of Labor Vitaliy Vasylchenko 1990 October 29, 1991
Mykhailo Kaskevych October 29, 1991 August 8, 1996
Mykola Bilobotsky August 1996 July 1997

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Official CMU website". Mar 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d New Cabinet formed in Ukraine, UNIAN (14 April 2016)
  3. ^ "Офіційний портал Верховної Ради України".
  4. ^ Rada supports coalition-proposed government lineup, Interfax-Ukraine (2 December 2014)
    Rada approves new Cabinet with three foreigners, Kyiv Post (2 December 2014)
    (in Ukrainian) Rada voted the new Cabinet, Ukrayinska Pravda (2 December 2014)
edit