International Student Research Conference at HSE St. Petersburg
Daniil Alexandrov, Deputy Director of HSE St. Petersburg
On February 2-3, 2017 the Higher School of Economics in St. Petersburg hosted the International Student Research Conference. The campus became a meeting point for young researchers and professors from Belarus, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Norway, Portugal, Russia, the UK, and Ukraine. For two days, participants attended lectures delivered by keynote speakers, presented posters and discussed issues of social informatics, applied data analysis, regional planning and development, sustainable tourism and development, modern Asia, finance, economic growth, logistics, usable pasts and political science. Sessions covered a wide variety of research interests.
Before the lectures and during breaks, participants had the opportunity to view posters devoted to various research topics. At the special poster presentation sessions, or Lightning Talks, each accepted poster was presented briefly for 3 minutes; presentations gave the audience an overview of the topics by covering relevance, motivation, key points, and poster number.
Paul Kind, professor at the University of Leeds (UK)
Inspired by the atmosphere of creativity and curiosity, Professor Daniil Alexandrov, Deputy Director of HSE St. Petersburg opened the conference with a welcome address and gave the floor to the first keynote speaker, Professor Paul Kind, for his talk Health economics – helping us deliver a more effective and efficient healthcare system. Professor Kind is a professor in the Leeds Institute of Health Sciences at the University of Leeds (UK). He serves as an international research advisor at the HSE International Centre for Health Economics, Management and Policy (Russia). Prof. Kind is currently studying the important question of how to measure and value the benefits of health care. Health economics is a new academic discipline and according to Professor Kind combines economic concepts with those of its more respectable neighbours, for example, psychology, mathematics, philosophy and politics. During this lecture, he shared the notion that we work with evidence about the costs and consequences of health care but that this occasionally leads to difficult decisions about whether to provide treatment and if so, whether it should be provided for all patients. Every healthcare system faces the same challenge of how to deliver effective care within affordable limits. Professor Kind raised the question of whether health economics in Russia can help deliver upon that goal.
Frode Guribye, associate professor at the University of Bergen (Norway)
Frode Guribye, associate professor and vice head of the Department of Information Science and Media Studies at the University of Bergen (Norway), gave a lecture entitled Ethnography in Social Informatics. He focused on how people can use the perspectives and tools from ethnography to understand the use of information and communication technology (ICT) in its social, cultural and institutional contexts. Professor Guribye noted that social informatics presents people with complex and multifaceted objects of inquiry, which leads to challenges in how to approach these objects of inquiry methodologically. These inquiries include understanding the relation between online and offline behaviours, as well as how to use different indicators of action, such as chat-logs and other digital traces of participation, and combining them with observations and accounts of action. He illustrated such challenges by citing examples from his own research, paying particular attention to studies of technology-enhanced learning and the design and use of mobile technologies.
Another keynote speaker was Brooke Harrington, associate professor in the Department of Business and Politics at Copenhagen Business School (Denmark). Her lecture, which was entitled Inequality and the Wealth Management Profession, addressed the issue of how eight individuals now own as much wealth as the bottom 50 percent of the world’s population.
One part of the puzzle that she noted concerns experts who make personal tax avoidance possible on a massive scale—an estimated US$200 billion annually. Professor Harrington said that this massive depletion of state coffers undermined efforts to provide public services, such as education, health care and transportation, or to distribute food and housing aid to those in need. That is why the poor get poorer, while the rich get richer in her view.
Harri Lorentz, acting professor at Turku School of Economics (Finland)
Harri Lorentz, acting professor of Purchasing and Supply Management in the Operations & Supply Chain Management Programme at Turku School of Economics (University of Turku (Finland)), delivered a lecture called The Analysis of Logistics Development Trends in Global Trends. His lecture focused on international trade as an important aspect in global economic growth and in the economic prosperity of individual countries. Professor Lorentz noted that conducting international business is dependent on the successful management of distance. Physical and institutional distance may cause friction in international transactions, so well-functioning trade logistics are important for international companies and global value chains. His presentation gave a macro perspective on logistics development globally from the perspective of the World Bank’s Logistics Performance Index 2016. Trends and issues were identified for the benefit of policymakers and practitioners.
Michael Rochlitz, associate professor in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the HSE School of Political Science (Moscow, Russia) gave a talk entitled Media and Politics in Hybrid Regimes in which he addressed a number of key questions. What role do the media play in hybrid regimes? Do independent media outlets have an impact on voting behaviour and political opinions in political settings where elections take place, but where election outcomes are often determined in advance? Professor Rochlitz presented the results from tests of these questions that were conducted in two recent empirical studies on the role of the media in the Russian Federation. The first study involved monitoring, coding and analyzing Russian and Ukrainian TV news for a period of 40 days in early 2015 to determine the extent to which TV channels in both countries play a role in commenting on and criticizing government activities. While TV channels in Ukraine actively discussed and criticized government activities, criticism of the government was all but absent on Russian state TV. In a second experimental study, a survey was conducted on political opinions and voting intentions before and after the 2016 Duma elections in Russia. After the first survey, a randomly selected sub-group of the people surveyed were provided with free access to the independent TV channel Dozhd. People who were exposed to the treatment and watched Dozhd were more likely to vote in the elections, but less likely to vote for the government party United Russia than those in the control group.
All of the lectures by keynote speakers and poster sessions resulted in lively discussions not only in the rooms, but also during the breaks. Many participants said that they would like the opportunity to attend again next year.
See also:
Pivot to the East: A Comprehensive Study of the Cultural and Civilisational Centres of the Non-Western World is the Top Priority
China and the Chinese world, South Asia, Southeast Asia, the Arab countries, Iran, Turkey, Central Asia and Africa are gaining new significance in Russia’s foreign policy. However, we do not know enough about the Eastern countries. It is necessary to change the priorities in education, starting from grammar school. Prospects for the development of domestic Oriental studies in the context of the new stage in the development of the system of international relations were discussed at a round table at HSE University.
‘I Admire HSE Students’ Eagerness to Learn, to Discuss, to Broaden Their Perspectives’
Robert Romanowski was a ‘Digital Professor’ at HSE University in November 2021. In his interview for the HSE News Service, he talked about the specifics of online teaching, his course on Strategic Branding, and the skills that are essential for marketing professionals today.
Russia and Africa: Time to Expand Cooperation
There is major potential for economic and humanitarian cooperation between Russia and African countries. Particularly, Russian organisations and universities can help transfer competencies and knowledge in the fields of agriculture, energy, industrial production, environmental management, climate change, and public administration. Experts and representatives of African embassies in Russia discussed these issues at the round table ‘Russia-Africa Sharing Knowledge’ hosted by HSE University.
The Brain in Space: Investigating the Effects of Long Spaceflights on Space Travellers
As part of an international project conducted with the participation of Roscosmos and the European Space Agency, a team of researchers used differential tractography to analyse dMRI scans ofcosmonauts’ brains and found significant changes in brain connectivity, with some of the changes persisting after seven months back on Earth. The paper is published in Frontiers in Neural Circuits.
HSE University-Perm and the Training Centre of the Uzbek Ministry of Finance Sign Cooperation Agreement
HSE University in Perm has become the first academic partner of the Training Centre under the Ministry of Finance of the Republic of Uzbekistan. The parties have signed a cooperation agreement in education and research.
HSE University Strengthens Ties with Netherlands in Agricultural Research and Education
On November 9, 2021, HSE University signed a memorandum of understanding with Wageningen University & Research, a major university in the Netherlands and one of the leading agricultural research institutes in the world. Participants of the signing ceremony included HSE University Rector Nikita Anisimov, President of the Wageningen University & Research Executive Board Professor Louise Fresco, and Dutch Ambassador to Russia Gilles Beschoor Plug.
The Majority of Russians Do Not Support Microchip Implants
The majority of Russians would not agree to being fitted with microchip implants for any purposes—medical or otherwise. A joint study conducted by HSE University’s International Laboratory for Applied Network Research and Aventica found that respondents believe the risks of personal data leaks and misuse to be too high.
‘We Can Now Say That the Finance Conference Is Global’
The 10th International Moscow Finance Conference, organized by HSE ICEF, took place on October 29–30 online. Vladimir Sokolov, Head of the International Laboratory of Financial Economics, which hosted the conference, talks about the participants, the key presentation topics and how they will impact the global economy.
HSE University Scholars Study Green Transition Risks and Greenhouse Gas Emission Regulation
The UN Climate Change Conference is taking place from October 31 to November 12 in Glasgow. The conference focuses on preventive measures against the catastrophic and irreversible consequences of rising average global air temperatures. Igor Makarov, Head of the HSE Laboratory for Economics of Climate Change, will be taking part in the Glasgow conference. In the following interview, he speaks about the pressing problems Russia and the world are facing, and the research HSE scholars are doing on climate change.
Applications to Speak at eSTARS 2021 Conference Accepted Until November 15
HSE University and Coursera are bringing together the world’s leading researchers, professionals, education and technology leaders, and business community representatives for the fourth international research conference eLearning Stakeholders and Researchers Summit 2021 (eSTARS). This topic of this year’s summit, which will run from December 1–2, 2021,is ‘Digital Transformation: Global Challenges to the Education System’.