Abstract:
This capstone examines why a substantial share of Azerbaijani students sponsored by the
State Program choose not to return home after completing their studies abroad. Through
semi-structured focus-group interviews with nine non-returning alumni and expert
interviews with three program administrators, the study explores economic drivers (wage
disparities, pension mismatches, remote-work opportunities), higher-education barriers
(faculty shortages, misaligned degree quotas, limited research infrastructure), and sociocultural frictions (management-style clashes, weak contractual safeguards, prestigecentered program design). Three policy bundles are developed: (1) binding return clauses
with graduated-repayment options; (2) indexed stipends, return bonuses, and matchinggrant schemes; and (3) a reintegration infrastructure comprising a Returnee Coordination
Unit, fellowships, alumni networks, and institutional reforms in academia and the public
sector. Evaluated for efficacy, feasibility, and cost, these options reveal that no single
measure suffices. Instead, a blended approach—combining a flexible service requirement,
strategic financial incentives, comprehensive reintegration supports, and workplace
modernizations—offers the best path to reverse brain drain and foster sustainable “brain
gain.” An adaptive governance framework is proposed to monitor outcomes and iteratively
refine program design.