Rashad Nabiyev

Rashad Nabi Oghlu Nabiyev (Azerbaijani: Rəşad Nəbi oğlu Nəbiyev; 1977 birth) is a chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Azercosmos.

Rashad Nabiyev
Azerbaijani: Rəşad Nəbiyev
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Azercosmos
Personal details
Born(1977-08-26)August 26, 1977
EducationPublic Administration Academy (1994-2000),
East Carolina University (2000-2002),
Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University
Awards,
Jubilee medal dedicated to The “100th anniversary of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (1918-2018)"

Education

  • 1994-2000 — Public Administration from Public Administration Academy under the auspices of President of the Republic of Azerbaijan (bachelor's and master's degrees).
  • 2000-2002 — East Carolina University, United States (Master of Science in Economics).
  • 2006 — Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University (program for Senior Executives in Public Financial Management).

Work

  • 1997-2000 — employee of the Information Resources and Technologies Center and International Relations Department at the President's Office of the Republic of Azerbaijan.
  • 2002-2004 — employee of the Market Operations Department of the Central Bank of Azerbaijan.
  • 2004-2011 — head of Finance, Accounting and Economic Analysis Department at the Ministry of Communications and Information Technologies of Azerbaijan.
  • Since January 24, 2011 — chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Azercosmos.[1]
  • 2014 — by the Order of the President of Azerbaijan Rashad Nabiyev for services in the development of space industry in Azerbaijan was awarded with the Progress medal.[2]
  • 2019 — by the Order of the President of Azerbaijan from May 27, 2019 Rashad Nabiyev was awarded with the jubilee medal dedicated to “The 100th anniversary of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (1918-2018)".
gollark: You're not concerned about computers having access directly to your brain?
gollark: Why does this bot seem so vaguely passive-aggressive?
gollark: BRB, setting up billion-dollar silicon fab.
gollark: Computers aren't secure enough that I would be okay with connecting my brain to one. At all.
gollark: Unironically speaking, though, I do not really want a brain-computer interface.

References

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