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Russian Academics Aim to Punish Colleagues Who Backed Ukraine Invasion

Some academic researchers in Russia are quietly working to prevent colleagues who have supported their country’s invasion of Ukraine from being elected to the Russian Academy of Sciences this month.

If they succeed, they will deny those who back the war a prized credential that confers prestige in Russian institutions of higher learning. Their campaign could also show that some acts of protest remain possible despite a government crackdown on dissent.

The Russian Academy of Sciences is a nonprofit network of research institutes in a variety of disciplines across the Russian Federation. It has just under 1,900 members in Russia and nearly 450 nonvoting foreign members.

The academy elects new members every three years. The upcoming poll, starting on Monday, is for 309 seats, including 92 for senior academicians and 217 for corresponding members. The competition is steep: More than 1,700 candidates have applied.

This month, a group of Russian researchers started circulating a list of dozens of candidates who have publicly supported Russia’s invasion of Ukraine by signing pro-war declarations or letters their universities or institutions released or by making such statements themselves.

Hundreds of high-ranking officials at Russian universities, most of whom were administrators rather than prominent scientists, also signed a letter in support of the war in March.

But many academic researchers have taken an antiwar stance. More than 8,000 Russian scientists and science journalists have signed an open letter opposing the invasion since it was first published in February.

Three academic researchers — who were not identified because they risk job loss, imprisonment and their safety by publicly opposing the war — said in interviews thatthey helped create the list of those who supported the war to prevent them from being elected to the academy.

Members of the leadership of the Russian Academy of Sciences did not respond to a request for comment.

Some voters think the list could make a difference in the elections.

“Most of the scientific community is definitely antiwar,” said Alexander Nozik, a physicist at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology who was not involved in creating the list. “Being in such a list could significantly reduce chances to be elected.”

Some outside observers say that the Russian Academy is not as powerful as it once was.

“It used to be a vast network of research institutes containing the best scientists in the country,” said Loren Graham, a historian who specializes in Russian science, with emeritus positions at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University. “Those institutes have now been stripped away by the Putin government, given to the Ministry of Education, and leaving the academy as an honorific society without genuine heft in science.”

Members of the academy have also been implicated in ethical shortcomings in recent years. In 2020, a commission the body appointed found that Russian academic journals and research publications were riddled with plagiarism, self-plagiarism and gift authorship, where scientists were listed as co-authors of manuscripts without contributing to the work. As a result of the report, Russian journals retracted more than 800 research papers in which the authors were thought to have committed ethical violations.

A separate 2020 exposé by the same commission at the academy found that several rectors and other senior university officials were guilty of publishing papers in questionable journals, listing fake collaborators and plagiarism.

And some say such problems diminish the importance of the academy’s upcoming election.

“A lot of people in Russian science still believe that the academy is the oldest structure that can do something — not because it is good but because others are worse,” said Dr. Nozik.

Russia-Ukraine War: Key Developments


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In eastern Ukraine. After seizing the city of Lyman, Russian forces are coming closer to surrounding the much larger city of Sievierodonetsk, the easternmost city still under Ukrainian control. Lyman is the second midsize Ukrainian city to change hands in one week.

In Kharkiv. Several neighborhoods in the northeastern city, where the Ukrainians repelled an attempted Russian encirclement in mid-May, came under fire again. At least nine people were killed in the attack, which shattered the sense of relative peace that had begun returning there.

Talks in Europe. European Union leaders will gather on May 30 and 31 to discuss Ukraine’s financial needs for reconstruction and the effect of the war on the global economy. But hopes that the summit would also see the end to a standoff with Hungary over a possible Russian oil embargo appear to have faded.

The war’s economic toll in Russia. Gripped by sanctions and isolated from Western suppliers, Russia is working to stave off a return to Soviet-era scarcity and prop up the economy. The Biden administration said it expected the country to default on its bond payments to U.S. investors after the Treasury Department allowed an exemption that permitted Russia to make those payments to lapse.

This is not the first time the Russian Academy of Sciences has found itself pulled into disputes over the invasion of Ukraine. On March 7, it released a statement about the war. Some observers saw it as the closest any official institution in the country came to condemning Russia’s aggression, but critics believed it was not as explicitly antiwar as it should have been.

But the statement did address the repercussions of the war and how the international response to it would affect Russian science, a concern shared by Russian academics.

“We condemn any attempts to exert political pressure on researchers, teachers, graduate students and students on the grounds of nationality or citizenship,” the academy said in its statement.

Some researchers fled Russia as a result of the war. Universities and institutions around the world have allotted positions to academics from Russia and Ukraine under programs like Scholars At Risk. Anna Abalkina, a sociologist of Russian origin at the Free University of Berlin, said was aware of some who relocated to her university.

Another problem is the deepening isolation of scientists who remain in Russia, with many being barred from participating in certain projects, working with international collaborators and attending certain conferences.

Another factor, Dr. Albakina said, is the decision of influential international databases, including Web of Science and Scopus, to stop offering their services in Russia.

“It means that the quality of publications will go down immediately,” she said.

Ultimately the future of Russian science hinges on whether President Vladimir V. Putin stays in power, Dr. Nozik added.

“It is my belief that it is not possible to do modern science in Russia under Putin’s regime,” he said.

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