糖心Vlog

Serf and turf war

Published on
May 16, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015

The Russian Academy of Sciences (RAN) produces the majority of Russian research - but are its members, set to vote for a new president, 鈥渟erfs鈥?

The election will take place at the end of this month. The incumbent, 77-year-old mathematician Yuri Osipov, has been in post since 1991.

RAN was founded in 1724. Its 11 departments oversee dozens of research institutions and it has around 500 full members and 700 member- correspondents, as well as 50,000 doctors and candidates of science. Its annual budget is 93 billion roubles (拢1.9 billion).

The election is being heatedly discussed online in hundreds of Russian- language blogs, forum posts and comments. Some relate to a recent post by Leonid Radzikhovski, a prominent and outspoken Russian journalist. In a blog published on 29 March, he called RAN members 鈥渟erfs鈥 whose opinions go unheard. Many found this comparison offensive, arguing that RAN鈥檚 scientists will contribute to the election decision, enjoy academic freedom, can pursue various opportunities domestically and abroad, and are paid decent salaries.

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Others describe Mr Radzikhovski鈥檚 observation as remarkably accurate and cite numerous examples of academic servitude and the absence of decision- making power among RAN members 鈥渋n the trenches鈥.

Since the body is so big, it is a challenge to hear every member鈥檚 voice. However, the first stage of the election process allows each department and research centre to present their candidates for the presidency. Eventually, a forum consisting of 1,200 academics and member- correspondents chooses a president from 12 candidates by majority vote (although the choice also has to be approved by Russia鈥檚 president).

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One of the candidates is RAN鈥檚 only living Nobel laureate, Jores Ivanovitch Alferov, who is 83. His campaign is reported to be built on a popular strategy of uniting to fight the 鈥渃ommon enemy鈥. This enemy is the Russian minister of science and education, Dmitry Livanov. Since he was appointed last May, Dr Livanov has questioned RAN鈥檚 efficacy. He has called its structure and management style archaic and said that it is interfering with its members鈥 ability to produce world-class research. Dr Livanov contends that in the world鈥檚 scientific powerhouses, universities and their research centres successfully perform the role RAN plays in Russia.

Many online commentators say they have joined Professor Alferov鈥檚 鈥渦nited鈥 front over fears that Dr Livanov could ruin RAN, destroy almost 300 years of research tradition and undermine Russian science. They say that the minister鈥檚 statements pay lip service to the US monopoly in research, which they argue is underpinned by Thomson Reuters鈥 citation data. They assert that Russia has always taken its own unique route in scientific research: indeed, during the Soviet era, RAN nurtured 15 Nobel laureates; and during the two decades after the collapse of the USSR, thousands of Russian researchers were sufficiently scientifically advanced to secure research appointments abroad.

Yet Dr Livanov has his own small band of online supporters. They criticise RAN鈥檚 upper echelons for research passivity and for supposedly favouring political and monetary benefits over scientific priorities. They also argue that RAN鈥檚 bureaucratic and financial structure could lead to its demise as a competitive member of the world research community.

Since 1724, RAN has shown both stability and the ability to adapt. The election could open a new chapter in its history - or even signal its end.

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