A Timeline of the Dissolution
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
A Timeline of the Dissolution
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
Science and higher education in exile are trying to do the (almost) impossible.
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
The experience of teaching public administration in an era of war
KIRILL SHAMYEV
2022 gave Kazakh academia a unique chance for advancement. The key is to use it.
ALEXANDER VILEYKIS
Academic disputes about the guilt and accountability of Russian professors
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
The pay gap is most noticeable in research universities.
At the request of the authors, names are not published
What does Iran’s experience tell us?
At the author’s request, the name is not published
If demand for independent Russian social sciences even exists today, there is nothing on the horizon that comes close to meeting it.
MIKHAIL SOKOLOV
February 24, 2022, marked the beginning of a catastrophe for Russian science and higher education.
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
Working in the field is becoming even more difficult.
At the author’s request, the name is not published
How scientific and educational cooperation between Finland and Russia has collapsed since February 24.
GLEB YAROVOY
The new policy of “The Foundations of Russian Sovereignty” against Article 13 of the Constitution of the Russian Federation
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
Russian universities have become a place for pro-war propaganda and the persecution of anti-war students and teachers.
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
How has the work of teachers at Russian universities changed since February 24?
LIDIYA YATLUK
Russian academia in post-revolutionary and current migration
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
Characteristics of Education at Russian Universities in 2022
LIDIYA YATLUK
“Academic patriotism” and “pure science” versus “academic citizenship.”
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
Two or three years ago, the pandemic dramatically mobilized the development of digital education in Russia. February 2022 sharply had everything backwards. What can one expect tomorrow?
ALEXANDER ESAVNIN
Russian scientific journals have only just learned to work according to international standards. We hope to preserve this experience under new circumstances.
At the author’s request, the name is not published
And now it is seeking to create another club, a proprietary science, with serious restrictions on rights and freedoms, inter alia academic ones.
DMITRY DUBROVSKY
Even if the situation in Russian science remains just as difficult, scientists’ ability to emigrate will be significantly restricted by external factors.
At the author’s request, the name is not published
University cannot help its community if it itself needs help. How to defend itself?
DARA MELNYK