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

HSE Takes Part in BRICS Summit

HSE Takes Part in BRICS Summit

© HSE University

On July 6–7, 2025, the 17th BRICS Summit took place in Rio de Janeiro. For the first time in the organisation’s history, representatives of civil society from BRICS countries participated. HSE Vice Rector, Head of the BRICS Expert Council–Russia, and Co-Chair of the Russian Chapter the BRICS Civil Forum Victoria Panova attended the meeting of the bloc’s national leaders.

In the run-up to the summit, a special session of the Civil BRICS Council was held in Rio de Janeiro on July 4–5. Representatives of civil society from the member countries reached consensus on a set of recommendations, which were formally presented to the heads of state on July 6 during the summit.

The presentation of these recommendations at the highest level marked the culmination of months of work within the BRICS civil track, which brought together over 120 public organisations from BRICS member and partner countries. Since the beginning of the year, dozens of online consultations had been held to develop a coordinated position. In April and May, HSE University hosted roundtable discussions involving the Russian chapter of the Civil BRICS Council, during which thematic working groups drafted position papers. A key milestone in the preparation process was the first on-site session of the Civil BRICS Council, held on July 4–5 in Rio de Janeiro. The special session brought together delegations of civil society activists, experts, and academic representatives from BRICS countries and their partners.

The final document outlined proposals across seven key areas of the Global South’s agenda. The recommendations focus on enhancing cooperation in the social, economic, technological and cultural spheres, expanding academic exchange, strengthening digital sovereignty, promoting sustainable development, and formalising civil society participation within the BRICS framework. Collectively, they reflect a desire for a fairer and more equitable world order in which the interests of developing nations and the voice of civil society play an increasingly prominent role.

Victoria Panova

‘Civil BRICS is not just a movement. It is not merely a club. It is a family. For the first time, we can say that BRICS represents a qualitatively new form of international alliance. Civil BRICS is an important complement to this, as the process clearly demonstrates how close we are and how much we can accomplish together for the benefit of our peoples,’ noted Victoria Panova. She added that the formalisation of the Civil BRICS Council was made possible through the combined efforts of all member states, with crucial institutional steps taken during Russia’s presidency in 2024.

The establishment of the Civil BRICS Council was enshrined in the Kazan Declaration in July 2024. It became a natural continuation of the BRICS Civil Forums held annually since 2015. Over the past decade, this track of public diplomacy has evolved into a permanent platform for dialogue between civil society organisations and BRICS governments.

For several years, HSE University has been providing expert support for civil society engagement within the BRICS framework. The university actively contributes to shaping Russia’s people-to-people agenda and helps to promote the values of equitable dialogue, sustainable development, and inclusive community involvement in international cooperation processes.

The next on-site meeting of the Civil BRICS Council is scheduled for October 2025 in the city of Salvador, Brazil. It will continue the discussion of implementation mechanisms for the proposed initiatives and explore ways to broaden the participation of Global South countries in the bloc’s agenda.

See also:

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.

HSE Researchers Experimentally Demonstrate Positive Effects of Urban Parks on the Brain

Scientists at HSE University have investigated the effect of parks on the cognitive and emotional resources of city dwellers. The researchers compared brain electrical activity in 30 participants while they watched videos of walks through parks and along busy highways. The results showed that green urban environments with trees produce a consistent effect across individuals, helping the brain calm down and relax. By contrast, walks along busy streets were found to be distracting. The findings have been published in Scientific Reports.

HSE to Launch Laboratories in Space Research and Nanoelectronics with One of India’s Top Universities

Scientists from the HSE University and the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT Bombay) will carry out joint research in the storage, transmission, and processing of data in space systems. A second major project will be a laboratory for superconducting spintronics—a promising field in modern nanoelectronics.

Scientists Show That Peer Influence Can Be as Effective as Expert Advice

Eating habits can be shaped not only by the authority of medical experts but also through ordinary conversations among friends. Researchers at HSE University have shown that advice from peers to reduce sugar consumption is just as effective as advice from experts. The study's findings have been published in Frontiers in Nutrition.

HSE University to Host Second ‘Genetics and the Heart’ Congress

HSE University, the National Research League of Cardiac Genetics, and the Central State Medical Academy of the Administrative Directorate of the President will hold the Second ‘Genetics and the Heart’ Congress with international participation. The event will take place on February 7–8, 2026, at the HSE University Cultural Centre.

HSE University Develops Tool for Assessing Text Complexity in Low-Resource Languages

Researchers at the HSE Centre for Language and Brain have developed a tool for assessing text complexity in low-resource languages. The first version supports several of Russia’s minority languages, including Adyghe, Bashkir, Buryat, Tatar, Ossetian, and Udmurt. This is the first tool of its kind designed specifically for these languages, taking into account their unique morphological and lexical features.

Language Mapping in the Operating Room: HSE Neurolinguists Assist Surgeons in Complex Brain Surgery

Researchers from the HSE Center for Language and Brain took part in brain surgery on a patient who had been seriously wounded in the SMO. A shell fragment approximately five centimetres long entered through the eye socket, penetrated the cranial cavity, and became lodged in the brain, piercing the temporal lobe responsible for language. Surgeons at the Burdenko Main Military Clinical Hospital removed the foreign object while the patient remained conscious. During the operation, neurolinguists conducted language tests to ensure that language function was preserved.

HSE Scientists Use MEG for Precise Language Mapping in the Brain

Scientists at the HSE Centre for Language and Brain have demonstrated a more accurate way to identify the boundaries of language regions in the brain. They used magnetoencephalography (MEG) together with a sentence-completion task, which activates language areas and reveals their functioning in real time. This approach can help clinicians plan surgeries more effectively and improve diagnostic accuracy in cases where fMRI is not the optimal method. The study has been published in the European Journal of Neuroscience.