TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm N2 - Naming and renaming of urban space often is sensitive in terms of the street location and status and implies categorization of streets according to the perceived importance of a street name. Thus, different locations in the city have different symbolic significance, and the urban toponymy could be read as a spatial projection of the societal axiological system. This article represents an attempt to study the importance of location (centrality vs. peripherality) and status (significance) of the urban public spaces in the 36 largest Ukrainian cities in terms of symbolical value and memory policy. The findings indicate that both investigated factors constitute an important tool of identity shaping and historical memory policy, but their influence and manifestation may vary considerably depending on specific historical, cultural and (geo)political conditions. Therefore, although the central parts of cities and the main urban arteries have tangibly larger symbolic significance, the toponymy of less presentable urban areas may be no less eloquent in the critical toponymy studies. L1 - http://rcin.org.pl/Content/129235/PDF/WA51_160302_r2020-t93-no2_G-Polonica-Gnatiuk.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Geographia Polonica Vol. 93 No. 2 (2020) PY - 2020 IS - 2 EP - 161 KW - urban toponymy KW - renaming of streets KW - identity KW - commemorative policy KW - street location KW - street status KW - Ukraine A1 - Gnatiuk, Oleksiy. Autor A1 - Glybovets, Victoria. Autor PB - IGiPZ PAN VL - 93 CY - Warszawa SP - 139 T1 - Do street status and centrality matter for post-socialist memory policy? The experience of Ukrainian cities UR - http://rcin.org.pl/dlibra/publication/edition/129235 ER -