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Russian Academic Diaspora: Its Scale, Dynamics, Structural Characteristics, and Ties to the RF

In: Migration from the Newly Independent States

Author

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  • Andrei V. Korobkov

    (Middle Tennessee State University)

Abstract

Russia’s worsening relations with the West and the proliferation of negative trends in the country’s development are raising serious questions related to scale, dynamics, territorial patterns, and structural characteristics of the Russian intellectual migration flow. Equally important are the degree of the Russian intellectual diaspora’s heterogeneity, the character and intensity of its attitudes toward the RF, and the major forms of its activities. Previous Russian policies toward its elite diaspora were both inconsistent and ineffective. In particular, policy goals should aim neither at limiting the intellectual migration flow nor at seeking the elite migrants’ massive repatriation to Russia. Rather, they should be limited in scale and aimed at an effective inclusion of Russian science into the international academic networks as well as the formation of Russian elite diasporas abroad.

Suggested Citation

  • Andrei V. Korobkov, 2020. "Russian Academic Diaspora: Its Scale, Dynamics, Structural Characteristics, and Ties to the RF," Societies and Political Orders in Transition, in: Mikhail Denisenko & Salvatore Strozza & Matthew Light (ed.), Migration from the Newly Independent States, pages 299-321, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:socchp:978-3-030-36075-7_14
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-36075-7_14
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    Cited by:

    1. Alexander Subbotin & Samin Aref, 2020. "Brain drain and brain gain in Russia: analyzing international mobility of researchers by discipline using Scopus bibliometric data 1996-2020," MPIDR Working Papers WP-2020-025, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany.

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