Pavel Makeyenko

Moscow Institute of Economics, Politics and Law
Department of Economics5th floor, 36 Obrucheva Str.
Moscow, Russia, 117342

Telephone: (095) 125-5965, 125-8234
Fax: (095) 125-5132
pam@polemp.msk.ru

During the 1994-1995 academic year, Pavel Makeyenko was a visiting research professor at The George Washington University, affiliated with the Research Program in Social and Organizational Learning. His stay in the USA was supported by the Junior Faculty Development Program, which is funded by the U.S.Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs and is administered by the Council for the International Exchange of Scholars. His mentor at GW was Professor Stuart Umpleby.Dr. Pavel Makeyenko is the Dean of Masters Programs and a Professor at the Moscow Institute of Economics, Politics and Law.  He is also the Scientific Secretary for the Institute for Systems Analysis of the Russian Academy of Sciences. His primary fields of interest are public, business and university administration. 

He is a member of the International Society for Quality Government and a member of the Editorial Board of “Public Voices,” a periodical co-sponsored by the Section on Humanistic, Artistic and Reflective Expression of the American Society for Public Administration at Rutgers State University. 

He has participated in programs at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria. He has traveled to Japan for management training, as well as frequently to the United States, where he has delivered lectures and presentations at several universities. 

His publications include the following: 

  • Public Productivity Handbook. Marc Holzer ed., Makeyenko trans., (New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc., 1992).
  • Science Policy and Research & Development Management in a Transitional Period.(Moscow: All-Russian Center for Scientific and Technological Information, 1990).
  • “Collected Papers of the Institute for Systems Studies,” Regional Development and Health Care Management, (Moscow: VNIISI, 1989), #5.
  • “Research and Development Economics and Management,” Small High Tech Businesses, (Moscow: Central Economic and Mathematics Institute, 1988).
  • “Problems of Constancy and Change,” Health for All by the Year 2000: Constant Trends and Changing Environments. (Budapest: 31st Annual Meeting of the ISGSR, 1987).