V Model UN at the State University of Management: Resolution adopted, best delegates selected

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The fifth Model UN scientific and business game was held at the State University of Management. The agenda focused on the topical issue of "Forming an Inclusive and Sustainable Global Economy in the Context of Technological Transformation."

This year, the event was attended by students from GUU, the Peoples' Friendship University of Russia named after Patrice Lumumba (RUDN), and the State Academic University for the Humanities (GAUGN), as well as students from the Letovo School and the GUU Pre-University.

Professor Nikolai Omelchenko, Head of the Department of Public Administration and Political Technologies, and Anton Vorobyov, Associate Professor of the Department, addressed the audience with welcoming remarks.

Participants in the scientific and business game played the roles of representatives from various United Nations member countries and discussed global issues related to the meeting's main theme. Following the meeting, a final resolution was adopted and the best delegates were selected.

The winner in the "Best Delegate" category was Maxim Prudnikov from the State University of Humanities, and the title of "Most Constructive Delegate" was awarded to Roman Ashchekin from the same university.

"The most valuable thing for me was the process of working together on the resolution," shared Dmitry Abramov, a student at the State University of Management. "Despite our different positions, we managed to combine our efforts and create a document that takes into account the interests of all parties."

The event was organized by the Department of Public Administration and Political Technologies of the State University of Management.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 26, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Shaping the Future: The 5th Congress of Young Scientists Opens at Sirius

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On November 26, the 5th Congress of Young Scientists opened at the Sirius University of Science and Technology. The forum's events traditionally featured a delegation from SUM: Rector Vladimir Stroyev, Vice Rectors Maria Karelina and Vitaly Lapshenkov, young university scientists, and international graduate and undergraduate students.

The Congress of Young Scientists is a key event of the Decade of Science and Technology, a major platform for dialogue between science, government, and the real economy. It provides an opportunity to jointly review the past year's achievements and serves as a starting point for new ambitious projects. Our delegation has already signed agreements that will mark the beginning of new areas of work and development. A trilateral agreement on cooperation in science and technology, involving young scientists, was signed by Vladimir Stroyev, Rector of the State University of Management, Dmitry Repnikov, Chairman of the Expert Council on International Cooperation in Education and Science under the State Duma Committee on Science and Higher Education, and Ivan Poselsky, Head of the Moscow Division of Promavto Group. Furthermore, a trilateral memorandum on joint work in science and technology was drafted and signed between the State University of Management, the Expert Council, and BUSINESS INTEGRATION SOLUTION.

Vladimir Sipyagin, First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on Science and Higher Education, was a guest of honor at the signing ceremony. He emphasized, "The development of science and technology rests on three pillars: education, research, and applied businesses working in the field of new technologies, which is crucial for our country—the companies with whom agreements were signed today. The State Duma platform, which is the expert council, is where proposals from businesses and the educational community are translated into legislative initiatives. I congratulate the participants of today's signings, and I am confident that these collaborations have a bright future ahead, leading to new scientific and practical achievements."

The congress includes events across the business, exhibition, sports, and cultural programs. The business portion traditionally features roundtables, expert sessions, and panel discussions, and also offers participants informal and interactive formats.

First-year graduate student Nguyen Thi Hai Anh shared her expectations for participating in the forum: "I'm very pleased to be participating in the Congress of Young Scientists—the most accomplished scientists and researchers have gathered here. It's a platform for dialogue and discussion of important issues and the search for solutions. I'd like to meet and interact with participants from Southeast Asia, where I'm from, Central Asia, and Africa. I also hope to discover new thoughts and ideas on the issues I'm researching in my dissertation."

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 26, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Council of Elders: The rector of the State University of Management met with the guardians of the university's academic traditions.

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On November 25, Vladimir Stroyev, Rector of the State University of Management, met with the GUU Council of Elders. At the beginning of the meeting, those gathered voted to include two new members: Sergei Lenshin, Director of the Institute of Distance Education, and Alexey Stepanov, Professor of the Department of Transport Complex Management.

Following the death of Council Chairman Alexey Lyalin this spring, those gathered unanimously elected Alexey Stepanov as the new head, Nikolay Omelchenko, Head of the Department of Public Administration and Political Technologies, as his deputy, and Lyudmila Derevyagina, Professor of the Department of Management Theory, retaining her position as Secretary. Nikolay Mikhailov, a member of the Council of Elders and Advisor to the Rector's Office of the State University of Management, noted that such meetings with the current university rector have become a good tradition.

Vladimir Stroyev, Rector of the State University of Management, briefed meeting participants on the university's preliminary results for 2025 and plans for the coming year.

"We're moving in the right direction and are now visible, among the leaders in higher education. People are talking about us, they want to collaborate with us, students are coming to us in large numbers, the competition for places and the quality of applicants' preparation are growing. Of course, like all universities, we anticipate changes, but we are already developing a policy and strategy to meet the new rules. If artificial barriers and restrictions on places don't appear, everything will be fine. We've picked up the pace and there's no stopping us," the rector emphasized, speaking about expanding cooperation with other universities, including in new territories. He also recalled the "GUU – SVOIm" campaign, in which the entire university community is participating.

Vladimir Stroyev also reported that the previous day, a GUU delegation had visited the Council of Supporting Scientific and Educational Organizations of the Rostec State Corporation for the first time. This demonstrates that our university is being considered a potential partner and candidate for inclusion in new joint programs: "Partnership with Rostec is a promising area of development. I believe that, unlike other universities, we can offer more practical and understandable programs for training specific specialists with specific, in-demand skills. This represents a significant amount of work that needs to be accomplished."

Another area that has demonstrated tremendous growth over the past three years is science, without which it is impossible to advance the educational process. Specifically, SMU scientists are participating in the implementation of the RosGeoTech Advanced Engineering School project at the Grozny State Petroleum Technological University named after Academician M.D. Millionshchikov (GGNTU), developing a high-tech agricultural management system in collaboration with the Omsk Agrarian Scientific Center (Omsk ASC) and Udmurt State University (UDSU), and have also won a grant to implement a technological initiative in the field of unmanned aerial systems (UAS). In the area of youth policy, the First Management School is also expanding and actively developing, reaching a new level of recognition. This year, the Digoria Expert Club and the KVN Scientific and Methodological Center were launched at our university. Alexander Maslyakov Jr., CEO of TTO AMiK, visited to study their work.

Infrastructure issues were also addressed. The rector announced that a new dormitory is planned to open next fall, and discussions are ongoing regarding the construction of a year-round stadium. Vladimir Vitalyevich also emphasized that one of the university's strengths, noted by all students, is the principle of a unified campus.

"We could increase the number of students. But we choose the quality of their training, not the number of students. Today, the economy needs specific specialists with a specific set of skills. The university environment must demonstrate a high level, and our university is no exception. SUM is implementing the presidential decrees, adhering to the schedule, moving in the direction the state needs, and is ready to implement new programs," concluded Vladimir Stroyev.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 26, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Learn to swim in the ocean of data: today is World Information Day

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On November 26, the planet celebrates World Information Day, established in 1994 at the initiative of UNESCO and the International Informatization Academy. This date is a call to reflect on an era when information is as necessary as air, but becomes dangerous if handled thoughtlessly.

Almost three decades ago, to find answers to questions, you had to go to the library, buy newspapers at the newsstand, or wait for the evening TV news. Today, all of humanity's knowledge fits on a smartphone: information is no longer scarce; it has become a constant flow—endless, noisy, and sometimes toxic. It's easy to drown in it: fakes spread faster than the truth, algorithms select what evokes emotion rather than what's important, and personal data becomes a black market commodity. In such an environment, we need to not simply consume, but consciously choose what to believe. And the most valuable skill of the 21st century is information literacy—the ability to distinguish truth from falsehood, think critically, seek out primary sources, and resist the temptation to share loud but empty headlines.

Of course, access to knowledge is an opportunity that should be equal for everyone, regardless of age, profession, or place of residence. But it's important to know what to do with it. Digital hygiene isn't just about passwords and antivirus software; it's also about the quality of your attention, the ability to disconnect from your feed, thoughtfully read a long article or book, and talk to someone other than through a screen. Because the most reliable test of emotion is a live conversation that takes place over a cup of tea, in a library, or among friends, where opinions collide and deepen. So, calm, quiet, ad-free spaces like libraries and hobby clubs have transformed from artifacts of the past into a kind of anchor in the midst of the digital storm.

In short, information literacy doesn't mean knowing everything. It's understanding what to trust and what to ignore, the ability to navigate the flow without losing yourself, and the courage to think for yourself. New challenges lie ahead, along with ever more sophisticated technologies and forms of deception. But one thing remains constant: the best school of critical thinking is a good book and sincere conversation. Let's take a break today: check the source, unsubscribe, and check out the library. And remember: information is neither an enemy nor a god, but merely a tool. And what it becomes depends only on us.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 26, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Achievements in all areas and space plans were discussed at the SUM Academic Council

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On November 25, the Academic Council of the State University of Management held a meeting. The agenda included more than 15 issues, including the establishment of a Center for Space Research, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, and Radioelectronic Technologies, the development of the university's international activities, and a summary of the Institute of Industry Management's preliminary results for 2025.

As per tradition, the meeting began with a congratulatory segment. GUU Rector Vladimir Stroyev presented Ekaterina Karelina with a Doctor of Economics degree and congratulated the birthday celebrants of the month.

As part of the meeting agenda, Galina Serebryakova, Director of the Institute of Industry Management, reported on the institute's preliminary results for 2025 and plans for 2026.

"The Institute only exists when it has students. Therefore, first and foremost, I would like to note the rather successful admissions campaign. The number of students studying on a fee-paying basis has increased. The most popular program this year was "International Manufacturing Business," while the most in-demand programs include "Project Management," "Organization Management," and "Logistics." Next year, we plan to further increase the number of students enrolling on a fee-paying basis," concluded Galina Serebryakova.

Vladimir Stroyev noted that the previous day, he and Vice Rector Maria Karelina attended a meeting of the Council of Supporting Scientific and Educational Organizations at Rostec State Corporation. During the meeting, they discussed the importance of training professional personnel, including in areas aligned with the IOM programs, further demonstrating that the work is headed in the right direction.

Inessa Bogatyreva, Head of the International Cooperation Department, spoke about the university's development of international activities and the organization of international student training at SUM.

"The university is actively working in all areas of international engagement: participating in competitions, exhibitions, visiting venues, internships, and more. We also host two Olympiads for international students: "Hi-Tech Breakthrough" and "Future of the EAEU." Currently, over 700 international students are studying at SUM. The largest number comes from Kazakhstan, followed by Vietnam and Kyrgyzstan. Slightly fewer students this year come from Chad, Belarus, and China. The most popular undergraduate programs are management, economics, and law," reported Inessa Bogatyreva.

The rector of the State University of Management noted that, largely due to its active international position and work within the Eurasian Network University, it was the first management team that was entrusted with implementing the international track of the "Academic Reserve."

"This is also an element of trust in our international activities and the university as a whole. We often talk about attracting and integrating international students. We have a fairly wide range of countries from which they come to us. Incidentally, our student from Vietnam met with the Russian president last year, and at this year's Congress of Young Scientists, she will also speak about this at the venue where I am speaking."

Continuing the theme of developing the scientific potential of our university, Maria Karelina, Vice-Rector of the State University of Management, proposed creating a Center for Space Research, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, and Radioelectronic Technologies.

"The center is a consistent step in training specialists for high-tech fields. With its help, we are consolidating ongoing research into a cluster and defining the SUM's position in three key areas of work. The first is the implementation of a technological initiative under the grant, the protocol for which was published yesterday. The second is SUM's integration into the "Personnel for Space" program. And the third is the implementation of future projects with the Rostec State Corporation," explained Maria Karelina.

In addition, the Council discussed the possibility and procedure for participating in all-Russian research, the opening of contractual training at the State University of Management's Pre-University, and a number of working issues.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 25, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

A Beating Heart in Frame: Nonna Mordyukova's Centenary

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Exactly one hundred years ago, on November 25, 1925, in Konstantinovka, Donetsk Oblast, a girl was born. Her father named her Noyabrina, and the entire country came to know and love her as Nonna Viktorovna Mordyukova. Above all, for her truly folk Cossack character—unbending, proud, and free, spiced with a fiery sense of humor. A great actress, her long life was full of light and shadow, love and loneliness, glory and loss.

Free Cossack

She grew up in Kuban, in a large, working-class family: six children, her mother a collective farm chairwoman, her father a military man. It was her mother, Irina Petrovna, who instilled in her a love of song, of the stage, of what would later become her destiny. And Nonna, still a schoolgirl, would sneak off to the cinema—not just for fun, but to watch, to listen, to dream: if only they'd show me too. And one day, seeing the name of actor Nikolai Mordvinov on a poster for "Bohdan Khmelnitsky," she wrote him a letter. She received a reply: first finish tenth grade, then apply to VGIK. And although studying was difficult for her, she obeyed.

After the war, Nonna went to Moscow to enroll in drama school: no rehearsals, no preparation, with only a burning passion within her. During the entrance exams, she improvised: she talked about Kuban, gesticulated, laughed, and cried. And the VGIK admissions committee saw an actress before them. While still a student, in 1948, she made her debut in Sergei Gerasimov's film "The Young Guard," playing Ulyana Gromova—a real person, a girl from a partisan detachment tortured by the Nazis. Nonna visited Ulyana's parents, walked around her room, and memorized details. The writer Alexander Fadeyev later admitted that if he had known Mordyukova when he wrote the novel, Gromova would have turned out differently. The film earned her the First Degree Stalin Prize and eternal fame. To the end of her life, the actress called this role her most precious.

Thorny film path

After "The Young Guard," Nonna Mordyukova experienced five years of silence. Her only escape from the agonizing wait for new film roles was her work at the Film Actors' Studio Theatre. Then came a small role in "The Return of Vasily Bortnikov," and finally, demand and success arrived.

Over the course of half a century, Nonna Viktorovna played more than fifty roles, some tragic, some humorous. She effortlessly transformed herself from a collective farm chairwoman (A Simple Story) to a languid merchant's wife (The Marriage of Balzaminov) or a stern Red Army commander (The Commissar). And each time, she was not just a character, but a living person.

"Commissar" became a special drama for her, as the film was banned immediately after filming. Mordyukova's character, a Red Army commissar, ends up in the home of a Jewish family on the eve of giving birth, where she finds unexpected support. But alas, director Askoldov was fired, and the copies of the film were destroyed, although, as it turns out, Gerasimova managed to hide one in a safe. Twenty years later, the film was shown, and the world gasped. The scene where the commissar breastfeeds her child became iconic: Nonna Mordyukova was one of the first Soviet actresses to allow herself to be naked on screen, not for effect, but for the sake of truth.

My own, my dear

After the resounding international success of "Commissar," Nonna Viktorovna was invited to appear in Hollywood, but she didn't want to play someone "outside." Soviet audiences, however, found many beloved roles. In "The Diamond Arm," Mordyukova played the vigilant building manager Varvara Sergeyevna Plyushch, and her lines were truly folksy, like "Our people don't take taxis to the bakery!" Director Gaidai championed her character—the bosses wanted to edit the vengeful utility worker out of the script. He even introduced the actress's last name into the fictional language of the smugglers: when they quarrel, the word "mordyuk" is clearly heard.

In Mikhalkov's "Kindred," she's a down-to-earth, suffering mother who came from the countryside to save her daughter from divorce. On set, the director harshly criticized and provoked Mordyukova to evoke strong emotions, forcing her to get an awkward perm and wear metal teeth. She even hit him once, but her performance was brilliant. And the dance scene, after which she was taken away in an ambulance, will forever remain etched in cinematic history.

Sad soul

Nonna Viktorovna dreamed of playing Aksinya in "And Quiet Flows the Don," but the role went to someone else, which deeply hurt her. In the 1990s, she wrote an autobiography, "Don't Cry, Cossack Girl!" It recounts her entire life: reserved, proud, sparing in pity, yet full of dignity and suffering, as the actress twice had to bury her son. On screen, in the film "Russian Field," where they brilliantly portrayed the tragedy of a mother and her adult child, and in real life, Vladimir Tikhonov, whose father was the famous actor Vyacheslav Tikhonov, the legendary Stirlitz from "Seventeen Moments of Spring," passed away at the age of 40.

She herself left this world on July 6, 2008, remembered for her brilliant film roles and a lonely star in the sky—asteroid 4022 Nonna, discovered by the Crimean Observatory, bears her name. There were no official funeral announcements, but people somehow found out, came with flowers, stood and wept, and whispered lines from her films. Because Nonna Mordyukova was ours—not in the sense of power or ideology, but in the sense of soul, character, and truth.

Today, on the centenary of Mordyukova's birth, viewers of the Mosfilm. Golden Collection channel recalled her leading roles. In first place was the building manager, Varvara Sergeevna Plyushch (47%), followed by Maria from "Rodnya" (46%). And behind these numbers lies not ratings, but love. Because Nonna Viktorovna, like no one else, knew how to be authentic—as simple and relatable, yet monumental and solemn as the melody of a song about the Volga, powerfully performed by another folk favorite, Lyudmila Zykina.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 25, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

The Tsar Bell: 290 Years of Silence, Filled with the Voice of the Russian Land

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On November 25, 1735, exactly 290 years ago, a miracle of Russian foundry art was completed in the Cannon Yard of the Moscow Kremlin: in 1 hour and 12 minutes, after 36 hours of continuous smelting, the Tsar Bell was cast in a ten-meter pit surrounded by four furnaces and guarded by 400 police officers with firefighting equipment.

A giant symbol of the era

The Tsar Bell is 6.24 meters high, 6.6 meters in diameter, and weighs 202 tons. Commissioned by Empress Anna Ioannovna, master craftsmen Ivan Motorin and his son Mikhail labored on it for two years. Ivan did not live to see the project completed; Mikhail took over, even requesting special permission to immortalize their names on the bell's surface. The Empress approved—in that era, this was a rare honor for a simple artisan.

Not only new metal was used for the casting, but also an old bell from the time of Boris Godunov. 525 kg of silver and 72 kg of gold were added to the copper-tin alloy—not for luxury, but to refine the future sound—and it was decorated with bas-reliefs: Christ the Savior, the Mother of God, John the Baptist, the Apostle Peter, and the Prophetess Anna. Among the saints, as a sign of continuity, were images of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich and Anna Ioannovna herself.

Eternal dumbness

In 1737, as the future Moscow alarm bell was being prepared for its ascent to the Ivan the Great Bell Tower, a terrible fire broke out in the capital. Flames engulfed the wooden formwork surrounding the bell, and the metal glowed white-hot. To save the bell, it was doused with water, but the sudden temperature change caused a huge chunk weighing over 11 tons to break off from the surface. The bell fell back into the casting pit, where it remained for nearly a century. Only in 1836 was it removed and mounted on a pedestal—no longer as an instrument, but as a monument to the genius and ambitions of the era.

Over nearly three centuries, the Tsar Bell has endured many changes. For example, during the revolutionary years, the White Guards placed its image on their banknotes, earning these forgotten bills the affectionate nickname "little bells." And in 1941, its cavity housed the Kremlin Regiment's communications center, and the bell itself was camouflaged, along with the Kremlin churches and towers, to protect it from Nazi bombing.

And yet it sounds

Still the largest on the planet, the Tsar Bell is not just a museum exhibit, but a living symbol of Russia. It stands near the Ivan the Great Bell Tower and is open to the public with a ticket to the Moscow Kremlin Museum Complex (student discounts, by the way!). And although this gigantic instrument has never rung—no one even cast a clapper for it; the one next to it is borrowed from another—its sound can still be heard: in 2016, scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, simulated what it might have sounded like, and this virtual ringing is now available online.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 25, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Mentoring Institute: Vladimir Stroyev, Rector of the State University of Management, Became a Mentor for Young Professionals

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Vladimir Stroyev, Rector of the State University of Management, along with his colleagues—heads of universities, business leaders, and legislators—are restoring the term "mentor" to its original meaning: a wise mentor willing to share their wealth of experience and knowledge with their students.

The organizers of the gala event "Creators. Rosmolodezh.Entrepreneur and Rosmolodezh.Profi" offered the first such opportunity to top Russian managers by creating a "Mentoring Lounge" for personal interaction with young entrepreneurs, professionals, and those still learning to be one.

This innovative, dynamic format includes several expert zones, each dedicated to a specific area of expertise. It is based on a rotation system: each half-hour round is divided into three parts. During each 10-minute interval, a mentor advises one participant, with the dialogue centered around the participant's request, even if it doesn't fit into the overall program.

"The 'Mentor's Lounge' project is aimed at developing entrepreneurial skills in young people. I discussed a wide range of topics with the students: for example, how to apply their technological skills in management or how to scale a business," our rector explained.

In addition, the "Creators" event included master classes, sessions, a prize draw, and a "Youth Market" exhibition, where you could purchase products from all over the country.

#RosmolodezhEntrepreneur #RosmolodezhProfi #Creators

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 25, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Victory: GUU won a grant for R&D in the field of UAS

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The final defense of projects by grant recipients for financial support of research and development (R&D) work to ensure the technological independence and global competitiveness of Russian unmanned aerial systems in priority technology areas took place on November 19. Vice-Rector Maria Karelina, SUMU research fellow and project manager Dmitry Nikitin, and Chief Designer of JSC Ploshchad, Alexander Kostin, presented their R&D project on the topic of "Development of a technology for controlling a swarm of unmanned aerial systems (UAS) based on artificial intelligence for the effective implementation of group deployment scenarios" to the NTI expert jury.

Drone Swarm: A Service-Based Approach

The research aims to minimize human involvement in unmanned aerial vehicle control and simultaneously enable UAVs to perform group tasks. The R&D goal is to develop an integrated network computing environment—an infrastructure for UAV control—that implements centralized, partially centralized, and autonomous scenarios. The demonstrator, delivered as a result of this work, will be a powerful server with deployed software for task planning and drone swarm management in a centralized scenario, as well as for swarms in semi-centralized and autonomous scenarios.

The economic impact is achieved through the implementation of a service-based approach, whereby ready-made computers and software enable the rapid modernization of existing UAVs, as well as the ability to provide device management services. The system created as part of this project is infinitely scalable, has no hidden data, and will be developed entirely by domestic developers. It is an important component of Russia's technological sovereignty.

The project will be implemented jointly with its industrial partner, NPO RUSTECHDRON, a Russian technology company engaged in the development and production of unmanned aerial systems (UAS), and the training of pilots and technical specialists. The co-implementer is JSC Ploshchad, a leading developer of software and hardware solutions for the military and civilian use of drones using artificial intelligence technologies.

The project submitted to the competition was highly rated by experts and received a grant of 294.7 million rubles for its implementation. The meeting minutes are posted on the NTI Foundation website.

Science and technology

Over the past three years, the State University of Management has been actively developing the field of unmanned aerial systems and creating the necessary research infrastructure within the university. Currently, the State University of Management's Engineering Project Management Center is working on three key UAS projects:

Development and justification of approaches to planning and implementing the introduction, deployment, and organization of the use of autonomous unmanned systems, robotic complexes, and infrastructure networks for communication, navigation, surveillance, and control, ensuring the operation of such systems and complexes, with specified regulatory levels of flight and movement safety of the complexes, and the probability of performing functional tasks. Development of a methodology for the application of software and hardware systems for autonomous unmanned aerial photography and technology for automatic vectorization of its results for the purposes of construction supervision. Analysis of the production and use of robotic devices and complexes in the construction industry and forecasting demand for a negative, inertial, and innovative scenario.

Furthermore, in 2025, TSUIP specialists won the 2nd All-Russian Competition for Young Scientists. The project, "Hybrid Decision Support System: Integration of a ML Cascade and LLM for Synthesizing Analytics in Logistics," addresses one of the key challenges of modern logistics in the transport industry: processing large volumes of disparate data.

BAS: university base

The Digital Innovations for Industry Lab has been opened at the State University of Management (SUM) within the RosGeoTech Advanced Engineering School. The lab is implementing the ABRIS project, which aims to create a hardware and software system for automated monitoring of oil and gas infrastructure facilities using unmanned aerial systems and mobile robots.

A major research project in the agricultural sector is dedicated to ensuring food security through the development of hardware and software systems and intelligent digital platform solutions. The project partners with high-tech companies specializing in robotics, unmanned systems, and digital agricultural solutions, including Cognitive Technologies, DigitalAgro, GeoScan, and others.

The Student Design Bureau of the State University of Management is working on areas such as the development of equipment, software, and infrastructure for UAS, mobile and technological robotic systems for solving problems in the oil and gas industry, the development of a highly maneuverable high-speed UAV, the creation of a portable anti-drone system, and the creation of machine vision systems.

The scientific groundwork of the State University of Management will serve as a fundamental basis for the successful implementation of a new research project in the field of UAS, aimed at developing a technology for controlling a swarm of unmanned aerial vehicles based on artificial intelligence for the effective implementation of group deployment scenarios.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 25, 2025.

Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Vladimir Stroyev, Rector of the State University of Management, took part in a meeting dedicated to the development of scientific and technological cooperation in Russia.

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On November 24, a meeting of the Council of Supporting Scientific and Educational Organizations of the Rostec State Corporation was held in Moscow. It was attended by Minister of Science and Higher Education Valery Falkov, Minister of Industry and Trade Anton Alikhanov, Rostec CEO Sergey Chemezov, representatives of the Corporation's holding companies, and rectors of leading Russian universities, including a delegation from the State University of Management, led by Rector Vladimir Stroyev and Vice Rector Maria Karelina.

At the meeting, eight strategic partnership agreements were signed with eight leading Russian universities: RANEPA, Samara University named after Korolev, UUNiT, Moscow State Law University named after Kutafin, KNITU-KAI, National Research University MPEI, Russian State University named after Kosygin, and South Russian State Pedagogical University named after Platov.

The Minister of Education and Science noted that the Ministry, including in collaboration with Rostec and the Union of Mechanical Engineers, is currently implementing a number of major projects and programs aimed at improving the quality of engineering education and promoting its popularization. These projects include industrial postgraduate programs, a program for the construction of modern campuses, the creation of advanced engineering schools, and the Priority 2030 program.

"When these programs and projects are implemented in the regions, we see that the outflow of young people not only stops. In some cases, they serve as magnets for young scientists and specialists from all over the country," noted Valery Falkov.

Anton Alikhanov, in turn, noted that over the past five years, the Ministry of Industry and Trade has funded more than 1 trillion rubles in research and development through the state program "Scientific and Technological Development of the Russian Federation." This program involves 155 universities and research organizations, as well as more than 1,300 enterprises.

"Over 550 projects have been supported under the unified R&D subsidy over six years. Since 2022, 470 projects have been implemented through the reverse engineering mechanism. Grants from the Foundation for Assistance to Small Innovative Enterprises are also available to support startups with high commercialization potential. We have agreed with the Foundation to implement special programs specifically tailored to national tech leadership projects," said Anton Alikhanov, Minister of Industry and Trade.

"In these challenging times for the country, both universities and industry must work together for a common cause. The combined efforts of university research and industry yield positive practical results. To this end, we are building the closest possible partnerships with universities—our companies collaborate with 140 universities across the country. We are enriching our educational programs with disciplines in demand in real-world production. We are creating the conditions for the development of young science. We support Advanced Engineering Schools—we already have 22 of them. We are funding R&D at leading universities and research institutes, involving young scientists—last year alone, approximately 17 billion rubles were invested in this. We are participating in the industrial postgraduate program initiated by the Ministry of Education and Science. These and other measures are aimed at one goal—to make our country even stronger and technologically independent," commented Sergey Chemezov, CEO of Rostec State Corporation.

The Council of Supporting Scientific and Educational Organizations under the Rostec State Corporation was established in 2024. Its mission is to unite the efforts of science and industry to create new technological solutions. Its members are developing mechanisms for developing cooperation between science and industry. In 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin approved two fundamental documents aimed at strengthening interaction between the scientific and industrial sectors: the updated Strategy for Scientific and Technological Development of the Russian Federation and the Decree on the National Development Goals of the Country through 2030 and through 2036.

The meeting discussed pilot projects in the area of science and industry cooperation, including industrial postgraduate studies, the creation of research and production associations at universities, industrial state assignments, and others.

The project results were summarized by Elena Druzhinina, Managing Director for Science and Business Cooperation and Chair of the Council of Scientific and Educational Organizations.

The State University of Management has always been a leader in training management personnel for sectors of the domestic economy. Over the past two to three years, we have significantly expanded our competencies in unmanned technologies, engineering design, technology projects, digital platforms, robotics, and control system automation, as evidenced by the successful completion of a major research project in agricultural technology, contract work commissioned by companies within Transmashholding, and research projects within the framework of the RosGeoTech Scientific and Educational School. As we have come to understand over time, this is the right direction, which is undoubtedly aimed at achieving key national goals—achieving food security and the state's technological leadership. Such rapid development of fundamental and applied science is impossible without the support of the Ministry of Science and Education, the Ministry of Industry and Trade, and the Ministry of Economic Development.

"The university's technological focus on research enables us to train not only management personnel with high professional competencies in the industry, but also a pool of young scientists capable of teamwork and project leadership. The invitation the university received to this event is proof of this. In the near future, we plan to propose to Rostec Corporation projects that would be interesting for joint implementation. The university plans to continue developing in this area, expanding the scope of its scientific research. With significant engineering expertise, confirmed by successful experience in implementing large-scale projects, we soon plan to sign an agreement with PJSC Signal, which is part of JSC Concern Radio-Electronic Technologies, a subsidiary of Rostec State Corporation," said Vladimir Stroyev, Rector of the State University of Management.

Together with the Rostec State Corporation and the Moscow government, the State University of Management is a member of the "Quality of Life in a Megacity" consortium of divers, a strategic academic leadership program for the development of the Russian economy. The main goal of this partnership is to unite the efforts of government agencies, educational, and scientific organizations to address practical development challenges in megacities and urban agglomerations in the following areas: digital management technologies, integrated environmental safety, transportation, road infrastructure, and logistics, product promotion and sales, information and communication technologies, ensuring the safety, availability, and quality of food, goods, and services, and big data analysis in socioeconomic research.

Subscribe to the "Our GUU" Telegram channel. Publication date: November 25, 2025.

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