Michel Sollogoub Named HSE Honorary Professor
On April 20, 2016, during the XVII HSE April International Academic Conference, Michel Sollogoub, Professor at Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne University, was awarded the tittle of Honorary Professor of the Higher School of Economics.
Professor Sollogoub is known for his research on labour economics, applied microeconomics, and econometrics. He has made a considerable contribution to the development of HSE’s relations with leading French universities and research centres.
Professor Sollogoub took part in the first HSE Academic Council meeting in December 1992. He explained his interest in the HSE project in simple terms: ‘Like many other descendants of the first wave of Russian emigration, I was willing to take part in rebuilding normal life in Russia. I did everything to bring the Russian and the French academic communities closer at the junction of two languages and cultures.’
The plan for HSE’s cooperation with French universities developed by Professor Sollogoub had several dimensions, including internships and courses for HSE students in France, internships and continuing education courses for Russian lecturers at French universities, and lecture series by French scholars in Moscow. ‘Several years later, we focused on training young Russian scholars’, Professor Sollogoub reminisces. ‘This is how the Sorbonne Laboratory of Applied Microeconomics welcomed a number of talented doctoral students, who wrote their theses under my colleagues’ supervision’.
Thanks to Professor Sollogoub’s efforts, cooperation between Russian and French universities was institutionalized, student and teacher exchange became ordinary practice, and double-degree Master’s programmes were launched.
Evgeny Yasin, HSE Academic Supervisor, congratulated Michel Sollogoub on the award and expressed his gratitude for his contribution in the evolution of HSE. Later on, Professor Sollogoub gave a lecture on ‘Inequality in income distribution in Russia and globally: lessons of the 40-year history’ at the ‘Society and Social Policy’ section of the April Conference.
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