... the natural sciences on the international academic markets over the past few decades (in the West in particular), while at the same time the number of social scientists and specialists in the humanities has grown beyond requirements.
Cooperation in Science and Education
to Promote an Innovative Approach
to Russia–China Relations
Thus, the starting conditions for international cooperation in the humanities were not exactly favourable. Of course, a kind of “export sector” emerged in this area during the ...
... artificial intelligence, the start of the Fourth Industrial Revolution was announced at Davos 2016. Innovation was also the focus of the 2016 Boao Forum for Asia. Seeking to keep pace with their peers internationally, Russia and China also prioritize science, education, technology and innovation.
The Strategy for Innovative Development of the Russian Federation for the period until 2020, as well as China’s official document entitled “Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21st-Century ...
... narrowing the field for interdisciplinary research and creative self-realization, only to facilitate brain drain by ousting the most gifted and inquisitive young researchers who would move abroad.
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Dmitry Feldman:
The Russian Political Science on International
Relations: Methods and Style of Cognition
Nevertheless, the drive of the Russian Ministry for Education toward streamlining the preparation and defense of dissertations is something to be treated thoughtfully taking into account both Russian and international practices. The problems in this field are numerous, with fake dissertations causing the ...
... it’s free up the huge potential of science and technology as a primary force for productivity”. So here is the “President” of China, the most rapidly developing economy in the world, who is saying exactly the same thing, that science and technology have to be the basis of innovation. And we have to make this link more effectively.
Yaroslav Kuzminov:
University Is a Competitive Network Environment
Going back to educational programs. You are on the Council of 5-100 Program. What are the main challenges that participating universities face in light of the economic crisis?
I think this is a great Program. I think it has increased the awareness in Russia of the ...
On February 25, 2016 the Russian International Affairs Council (RIAC) hosted a
round table “Russia's International Cooperation in Science and Education.”
The event was attended by representatives of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation, the Russian Foreign Ministry,
the
Federal Agency for the Commonwealth of Independent States, Compatriots Living Abroad and ...
... and institutions, and not necessarily from other countries.
This is a necessary condition for any effective, competitive big science. If we fail to cultivate such a community within the country, there will be no skilled personnel to staff, but the specialists ... ... managers is not just to train and hire a certain number of applicants, but to make sure that they stay here, in Russia. Our first educational initiative is aimed at the most advanced training programs. The most striking example is the Yandex School of Data ...
... Principles for Scientific Organization in Russia” written by you and Professor Ponomarev insists that the key factors for scientists include free movement, the availability of scientific contacts, a comfortable bureaucratic climate and accessible education. How would you describe the current availability of these preconditions?
Until recently, the trend had been quite positive. Scientific ties were prioritized in science and innovation policy, with several major programs launched to attract key foreign minds.
These include the programs of mega-grants, support for diaspora-led joint projects, and the accession of five Russian universities into the global Top 100 ...
... if the Bologna system has become naturalized in Russia; how the mega-grants program contributes to the development of science; and whether a “cooling of relations” is affecting the development of international cooperation in the fields of science and education.
What are the key competencies that make an individual competitive nowadays? What approaches make a company competitive? What role does education play in acquiring these competencies and adopting these approaches?
I would say that there are ...
... countries should have command over key patterns offered by the theory of international relations.
A text needs to be no more than half a page long, and ideas should be formulated in three paragraphs.
The Asian market appears quite promising for Russian science and education in the realm of international relations, and we can offer schemes that are more flexible than those of our Western counterparts, who regrettably often impose their standard paradigms.
What do you think about promoting works by Russian scholars ...
Eighteen
Russian universities
have been included in the
British QS ranking
of the best universities of the world, among them RIAC corporate members – St. Petersburg State University, Moscow State Institute of International Relations, Urals State University and Nizhniy Novgorod State University, as well as RIAC partners – Higher School of Economics and the Far East Federal University.
By 2020, 15 Russian universities should join the top 200, with five of them the top 100 of one of the...