Olga Jurjewna Wassiljewa

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Olga Jurjewna Wassiljewa (2016)

Olga Jurjewna Wassiljewa ( Russian Ольга Юрьевна Васильева ; born January 13, 1960 in Bugulma ) is a Soviet - Russian church historian , university teacher and politician .

Life

Vasilyeva attended middle school (graduated in 1975) and then studied in the choral conducting department of the Moscow State Institute of Culture, graduating in 1979. She then worked as a singing teacher at Moscow Schools No. 578 and 91. In 1982 she began studying in the evening department of the History Faculty of Moscow State Distance Education Institute (now Moscow Sholokhov State University of Humanities ) while working as a history teacher in the upper classes at School No. 91 . After graduating in 1987 she began postgraduate at the Institute of History of the USSR of the Academy of Sciences (since 1991 Institute of Russian History of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAN)) at Georgi Alexandrovich Kumanjow . In 1990, she defended her dissertation on the Soviet state and the patriotic activity of the Russian Orthodox Church during the German-Soviet War for a doctorate as a candidate for historical studies . This dissertation was the first work on the relationship between the Russian state and church in the 20th century.

From 1991 to 2002 Vasilyeva worked as a research assistant at the Center for Religious and Church History of the Institute for Russian History of the RAN, where she eventually became director of the Center for Religious and Church History. In 1998 she defended her dissertation on the Russian Orthodox Church in the politics of the Soviet state in the years 1943–1948 for a doctorate in history.

In 2002 Vasilyeva became head of the Chair of State and Denomination Relationships at the Russian Academy of Economics and Public Service under the President of the Russian Federation in Moscow. The relationship between state and church remained her main research focus. She published her work in national and international magazines and newspapers, including Eastern Europe , La Nuova Europa, Nesawissimaja Gazeta and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung . She is a member of the International Association for the History of Religion . Since 2003 she has taught at the Sretinsky Spiritual Seminar in Moscow's Sretinsky Monastery . She completed her studies in international relations in 2007 at the Academy for Diplomacy of the Russian Foreign Ministry. She is chair of the United Dissertation Council for theology of ecclesiastical institutions and the Church Tikhonov University as well as the Lomonosov University in Moscow and the Russian Academy of Economics and Public Service under the President of the Russian Federation.

In February 2012, Vasilyeva became Deputy Director of the Department of Culture of the Russian Government. At the beginning of 2013, she became vice-head of the Russian Presidential Administration formed in October 2012 from the administration for social projects . In 2014, she and others initiated the discussion on conservatism in the All-Russian Popular Front . She became a member of the Council for the Preparation of a Program for a Course in Patriotic History at the Ministry of Education, the Commission on Religious Affairs in the Russian Government, and the Working Group on Participation of the Disabled in Cultural Life of the Society of the Presidential Commission on Disability Affairs and the Council for dealing with religious issues in the electronic mass media at the Ministry of Press and Electronic Mass Media. By ukase from President Putin on September 16, 2014, she was appointed Real State Councilor II class of the Russian Federation .

At a working meeting of Putin on August 19, 2016 at Belbek Airport in Crimea , Prime Minister Dmitri Anatolyevich Medvedev proposed Vasilyeva as the successor to Dmitri Viktorovich Liwanow for the office of Minister of Education and Science . Putin agreed to the proposal and immediately signed the relevant ukase. After the division of the ministry in May 2018, Vasilyeva became Minister of Education. and remained in office until mid-January 2020.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Биография Ольги Васильевой . In: RIA Novosti . August 19, 2016 ( [1] [accessed January 6, 2020]).
  2. a b c d e Минпросвещения России: Министр просвещения Российской Федерации (accessed January 6, 2020).
  3. a b c Кто такая Ольга Васильева: что известно о новом министре образования . In: TASS . August 19, 2016 ( [2] [accessed January 6, 2020]).
  4. Васильева Ольга Юрьевна (accessed January 6, 2020).
  5. Впервые в истории России создан диссертационный совет по теологии в системе Министеме Миниустерстя ана .
  6. Указ Президента Российской Федерации от September 16, 2014 г. № 632 (accessed January 6, 2020).
  7. Указ Президента Российской Федерации от August 19, 2016 № 417 “О Министре образования и науки Российской Федерация” (accessed January 6, 2020).
  8. Путин утвердил новый состав правительства . In: RIA Novosti . May 18, 2018 ( [3] [accessed January 6, 2020]).