Znaniye.Premiya's Expert Council of 300 to Pick Russia's Top Enlighteners
Znaniye.Premiya, Russia's premier enlightenment award, has assembled an Expert Council of over 300 representatives from across the country. The Council will evaluate applications using a new objective system, with each submission reviewed by five experts, including just one from the applicant's region. The process aims to create a federal shortlist in 15 categories and select the best enlightener and enlightenment project in each subject of the Russian Federation.
The Expert Council is composed of individuals from diverse fields, including culture, science and education, economics and industry. Among the representatives are four individuals from Krasnodar Krai: Dmitry Nosov, Roman Romanchuk, Vladimir Litvinenko, and Inna Shevchenko. Another set of four representatives from the same region includes Anton Nemkin, Alexander Trembitsky, Yulia Muzhurenko, and Viktor Skorobogatov. This regional diversity ensures a broad range of perspectives in the evaluation process.
The new evaluation system aims to ensure fairness and impartiality. Each application will be reviewed by five experts, with only one coming from the applicant's region. This approach reduces the risk of regional bias and promotes a more objective selection process.
The Expert Council of Znaniye.Premiya, with its diverse composition and objective evaluation system, is poised to select the best enlighteners and enlightenment projects in Russia. The federal shortlist and final selections will reflect the Council's rigorous and fair assessment process, ensuring that the most deserving candidates are recognised.
Read also:
- American teenagers taking up farming roles previously filled by immigrants, a concept revisited from 1965's labor market shift.
- Weekly affairs in the German Federal Parliament (Bundestag)
- Landslide claims seven lives, injures six individuals while they work to restore a water channel in the northern region of Pakistan
- Escalating conflict in Sudan has prompted the United Nations to announce a critical gender crisis, highlighting the disproportionate impact of the ongoing violence on women and girls.