Abstract
<jats:p>The article aims to provide an interdisciplinary rationale for trauma-informed education as a mechanism for building resilient human capital in the context of war and post-war recovery in Ukraine. The study draws on a theoretical and analytical review of contemporary research in neuroscience, economics of education, and trauma psychology, combined with systems thinking and structured logical analysis, to trace causal links between psycho-emotional safety, students’ cognitive functioning, educational outcomes, and long-term labour productivity. The scientific novelty of the study lies in conceptualising neuroplasticity as an economically significant factor that determines a child’s capacity to restore cognitive resources, improve educational outcomes, and subsequently develop higher labour productivity and adaptability in the labour market. The findings demonstrate that chronic stress and traumatic experiences undermine learning capacity through impairments in emotional regulation, attention and executive functioning, which in turn lead to lower educational attainment and reduced economic productivity in adulthood. The article argues that trauma-informed education, when embedded in pedagogical practices, school governance, and student support systems, helps create safe and neuroplastically favourable learning environments. Such environments foster self-regulation, critical thinking, emotional intelligence, and collaboration skills — competencies that are increasingly essential in a knowledge-based economy and a rapidly transforming labour market. The paper concludes that investment in trauma-informed education and children’s psycho-emotional recovery programmes should be treated as a macroeconomic priority, as it reduces long-term GDP losses associated with unrealised skills and strengthens the foundations of a resilient and innovation-driven economy.</jats:p>