Generated by GPT-5-mini| Institute of Demography (Moscow) | |
|---|---|
| Name | Institute of Demography (Moscow) |
| Native name | Институт демографии (Москва) |
| Established | 1990s |
| Type | Research institute |
| City | Moscow |
| Country | Russia |
Institute of Demography (Moscow) is a research institute based in Moscow specializing in population studies, demographic analysis, and policy evaluation. The institute conducts quantitative and qualitative research on fertility, mortality, migration, ageing, and family dynamics, engaging with international organizations and national agencies. It serves as a hub for scholars affiliated with universities, research centers, statistical services, and international foundations.
The institute was founded during the post-Soviet transition era with influences from Russian Academy of Sciences, Higher School of Economics, Moscow State University, United Nations Population Fund, and World Bank. Early collaborations included projects linked to Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees migration studies and comparative work with Max Planck Society, INED, and Population Council. Funding and institutional links involved European Union programs, NATO-era cooperative research initiatives, and grants from Ford Foundation and Open Society Foundations. The institute's chronology intersects with demographic shifts studied by scholars connected to Alexandr Herzen University, State Statistical Committee of the Russian Federation, and think tanks such as Carnegie Moscow Center and Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration.
The institute's mission aligns with mandates seen at United Nations Economic Commission for Europe, World Health Organization, and United Nations Development Programme to inform policy on ageing and health. Research priorities include links between fertility trends documented by United Nations, life expectancy analyses referencing World Bank datasets, internal migration patterns compared to studies in China, India, and Brazil, and family policy evaluation similar to work by OECD. The institute emphasizes evidence-based analysis akin to reports produced by Eurostat, International Labour Organization, and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
The organizational model reflects structures used by Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, US Census Bureau, and university-affiliated centers like Population Studies Center (University of Michigan), with divisions for quantitative methods, population health, labour demography, and migration. Leadership roles mirror positions at Russian Academy of Sciences institutes, with advisory boards similar to panels convened by National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and steering committees reflecting partnerships with UNICEF and UNFPA.
Programs cover fertility and family change parallel to studies by Princeton University, Harvard University, and London School of Economics; mortality and cause-of-death research in coordination with World Health Organization and Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation; internal and international migration projects akin to analyses by International Organization for Migration and Migration Policy Institute; and ageing research comparable to work at European Commission research networks and HelpAge International. Projects have used methods drawn from scholars associated with Cambridge University, Oxford University, Yale University, and Columbia University.
The institute publishes working papers, monographs, and policy briefs similar to outlets from Population Studies, Demography, European Journal of Population, and regional journals tied to Russian Academy of Sciences presses. Data resources include microdata and aggregated indicators comparable to datasets from IPUMS, Human Mortality Database, Demographic and Health Surveys, and national censuses administered by Rosstat. The institute contributes to collaborative databases with UNdata, Eurostat, and research infrastructures modeled after CESSDA.
Collaborations extend to international research centers such as Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Wittgenstein Centre, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, and universities including Higher School of Economics, Moscow State University, European University at Saint Petersburg, University of Oxford, and University of Cambridge. Partnerships include multilateral organizations like United Nations Population Fund, World Bank, World Health Organization, and regional bodies such as Council of Europe and Eurasian Development Bank. The institute engages with foundations such as Ford Foundation and Open Society Foundations, and networks like International Union for the Scientific Study of Population and Population Association of America.
Faculty and alumni have held posts at institutions including Russian Academy of Sciences, Higher School of Economics, Moscow State University, European University Institute, Max Planck Society, World Bank, United Nations, and Harvard University. Notable collaborators include researchers who have published with Population Studies, Demography, Lancet, Nature, and participants in panels convened by G20 and BRICS working groups on social policy. Alumni have taken roles at Rosstat, Ministry of Labour and Social Protection of the Russian Federation, UNICEF, UNFPA, and nongovernmental organizations like HelpAge International.
Category:Research institutes in Moscow Category:Demography