• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

Early-Career Researchers Discuss Cooperation between Russia and Arab States

Early-Career Researchers Discuss Cooperation between Russia and Arab States

© HSE University

HSE University has hosted a conference entitled ‘Russia—The Arab World: Digital Future and Youth Cooperation,’ organised by the Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs (WEIA). The meeting took place in the run-up to the first Russian–Arab summit, due to be held in Moscow on October 15, 2025.

Anastasia Likhacheva

‘I am very pleased that the conference brings together both Russian students studying Arabic and students from Arab countries who are interested in developing cooperation in Russia and across the Arab world. Communicate, make connections, debate, ask questions. After all, in five, ten, or fifteen years it will be you who have to answer them,’ said Anastasia Likhacheva, Dean of WEIA, addressing the audience. She expressed the hope that the most interesting ideas and proposals would be communicated to the official representatives of the countries.

Dmitry Efremenko, Head of the School of International Regional Studies at WEIA, stressed the importance of the event, describing it as unprecedented. Firstly, this was the first conference of early-career Arabists to be held in the Arabic language. This, he noted, creates a more trusting atmosphere that helps consolidate the research community.

Dmitry Efremenko

‘The second distinctive feature of the event is that it coincides with the forthcoming Russia–Arab summit, which I believe will raise cooperation between our countries to a fundamentally new and higher level, opening up fresh prospects for political engagement, economic cooperation, collaboration in technology, and many other fields,’ he said.

According to Dmitry Efremenko, the conference is taking place at a difficult moment both for Russia and for the Arab world. ‘Very complex and contradictory events are unfolding, the consequences of which will, of course, become fully apparent only later. That is all the more reason why, in such circumstances, it is crucial to maintain dialogue and to sustain it on a regular basis across a wide range of channels—from heads of state to the work of early-career researchers. This will make it possible in the future to reach a new level of expert support for political decision-making and for economic cooperation between our countries,’ he observed.

In his view, it is particularly important to discuss such issues as cybersecurity and standards in the digital sphere. Concluding his speech, Dmitry Efremenko expressed the hope that the conference would mark the beginning of a strong and sustainable research community.

New technologies are radically transforming both the world economy and world politics, agreed Moscow State University professor Igor Yaminsky. ‘Digital technologies are advancing at an incredible and rapid pace, one that only the younger generation, with their 96 billion neurons, will be able to keep up with,’ he said.

All countries, including those of the Arab world, are now focused on the development of digital technologies, observed Igor Yaminsky. For instance, Saudi Arabia is creating the city of the future, Neom, where digital technologies will play a leading role. The UAE has a Minister of Artificial Intelligence, while Bahrain, Kuwait, and Egypt are already launching small satellites built utilising digital technologies, he noted. Russia, too, is rapidly advancing in new technologies.

In recent years, relations between Russia and the Arab world have seen positive growth, as evidenced by a whole series of agreements reached in various fields—from the intensification of political, economic and trade cooperation to cultural, educational, scientific and technical, humanitarian and tourism exchanges, noted Walid Hamed Shiltagh, Ambassador of the Arab League to Russia. He expects this positive dynamic to gain fresh momentum thanks to the first Russia–Arab summit. At the same time, cooperation in education has traditionally played an important role in building bridges of communication, Walid Hamed Shiltagh stressed.

Andrey Baklanov

Student and youth cooperation plays a significant role in international politics—indeed, in some countries such movements are regarded with concern, remarked Prof. Andrey Baklanov, Head of the Middle East and North Africa Studies Section at HSE University. He is confident that the scale and significance of such cooperation will only continue to grow.

The conference was attended by students from HSE and other Russian universities. In their presentations, they spoke about youth diplomacy and student collaboration between Russia and Arab states.

See also:

HSE and Nazarbayev University: Scientific and Educational Cooperation

In April 2026, HSE University welcomed an official delegation from Nazarbayev University. The visit primarily focused on establishing cooperation between the two universities, expanding partnership ties, and developing joint projects in support of strengthening bilateral relations between Russia and Kazakhstan.

‘Meet Professors, Gain Experience’: Uzbek Lyceum Students Undertake Placement at HSE

The fourth off-site school organised under the Lyceum Classes project has taken place with the support of HSE University and implemented by the HSE Department of Internationalisation. This year, 79 students from International House Tashkent and Interhouse Lyceum came to HSE. The programme includes an introduction to the university, the opportunity to attend classes, and tours around Moscow.  

HSE University Presents Research Results at AI Conference in Oman

In April 2026, the International Conference on Intelligent Systems and Artificial Intelligence Applications (ISAA 2026) was held at the University of Nizwa in the Sultanate of Oman. The event was co-organised by HSE University, the University of Nizwa, and the University of Technology and Applied Sciences–Ibri. Researchers from HSE University were among the key speakers at the conference.

'What Impressed Me Most Was the Highly Active and Energetic Group of Students'

Sankha Basu, Assistant Professor at the Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology (IIIT-Delhi), taught a course at the Spring School 'Logic, Linguistics and Formal Philosophy' hosted by the International Laboratory for Logic, Linguistics and Formal Philosophy. This was his first visit to a Russian university, and he shared his impressions with the HSE News Service.

HSE University Installs Geoscan Station at IIT Bombay

A Russian ground station for receiving SONIKS satellite data has been installed on the campus of the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT Bombay). Developed by Geoscan, the system will become part of a mirror laboratory project run jointly by HSE University and one of India’s leading universities.

‘It Is a Great Honour for Us to Be Partners’

In late March 2026, an official meeting took place between a delegation from HSE University and delegations from Vietnam National University, Hanoi (VNU); the Government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam; and the Embassy of Vietnam in the Russian Federation. The participants discussed key areas of cooperation that will help strengthen ties not only between the universities, but also between the two countries.

How the Brain Processes a Word: HSE Researchers Compare Reading Routes in Adults and Children

Researchers from the HSE Center for Language and Brain used magnetoencephalography to study how the brains of adults and children respond to words during reading. They showed that in children the brain takes longer to process words that are frequently used in everyday speech, while rare words and pseudowords are processed in the same way—slowly and in parts. With age, the system is reorganised: high-frequency words shift to a fast route, whereas new letter combinations are still analysed slowly. The study was published in the journal Psychophysiology.

How Neural Networks Detect and Interpret Wordplay: New Insights from HSE Researchers

An international team including researchers from the HSE Faculty of Computer Science has presented KoWit-24, an annotated dataset of 2,700 Russian-language Kommersant news headlines containing wordplay. The dataset enables an assessment of how artificial intelligence detects and interprets wordplay. Experiments with five large language models show that even advanced systems still make mistakes, and that interpreting wordplay is more challenging for them than detecting it. The results were presented at the RANLP conference; the paper is available on Arxiv.org, and the dataset and the code for reproducing the experiments are available on GitHub.

HSE Holds Exams, Quizzes, and Selection Rounds for School Students in Tashkent and Bishkek

More than 3,000 international school students took part in the INTO HSE International Olympiad, whose award ceremonies were held in Tashkent and Bishkek in March 2026. The university’s outreach events also included final examinations, presentations of academic programmes, and on-site selection tests for prospective applicants. In Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, nearly 200 participants received diplomas as winners and prize-winners. The best of them will be eligible to apply for state-funded places at HSE.

BRICS International School Held in Delhi

The results of the BRICS International School: New Generation, which was held in Delhi, proved that young people have become key participants in the global dialogue. The event brought together 200 young leaders from leading universities and expert centres in India. The programme was organised by the BRICS Expert Council–Russia, based at HSE University, together with the Russian House in New Delhi with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation.