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Research Institute for Nuclear Problems of Belarusian State University

1986 establishments in the Soviet UnionAll pages needing cleanupCommons category link is locally definedResearch institutes established in 1986Research institutes in Belarus
Research institutes in the Soviet Union
Institute for Nuclear Problems of BSU people
Institute for Nuclear Problems of BSU people

The Research Institute for Nuclear Problems of Belarusian State University (INP BSU) is a research institute in Minsk, Belarus. Its main fields of research are nuclear physics, particle physics, materials science and nanotechnology.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Research Institute for Nuclear Problems of Belarusian State University (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Research Institute for Nuclear Problems of Belarusian State University
Бабруйская вуліца, Minsk

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N 53.892777777778 ° E 27.546944444444 °
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Бабруйская вуліца 11
220006 Minsk (Maskowski District)
Belarus
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Institute for Nuclear Problems of BSU people
Institute for Nuclear Problems of BSU people
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National Assembly of Belarus
National Assembly of Belarus

The National Assembly of the Republic of Belarus (Belarusian: Нацыянальны сход Рэспублікі Беларусь, romanized: Nacyjanalny schod Respubliki Bielaruś; Russian: Национальное собрание Республики Беларусь, romanized: Natsionalnoye sobran'ye Respubliki Belarus') is the bicameral parliament of Belarus. The two chambers of the National Assembly are: the Council of the Republic – the upper house the House of Representatives – the lower house.While each chamber has specific duties, both chambers have the ability to veto the decrees of local administrations that deviate from the Constitution of Belarus. The chambers of the National Assembly are convened to two regular sessions every year: the first session opens 2 October and its duration cannot be more than 80 days; the second session opens 2 April and does not last more than 90 days. The House of Representatives and the Council of the Republic may be convened to an extraordinary session. Extraordinary sessions are convened under a particular agenda upon an initiative of the President or upon a request of at least two-thirds majority of the full membership of each of the chambers.Any bill must be initially considered in the House of Representatives and then in the Council of the Republic. In practice, the National Assembly has no real power. The Belarusian political system concentrates all governing power in the hands of President Alexander Lukashenko. Notably, the National Assembly has no control over government spending; according to the Constitution, any bill that increases or decreases spending can only be considered with presidential permission. Presidential decrees have greater weight than ordinary legislation. However, since it took its current form in 1996, the National Assembly has been dominated by Lukashenko's supporters in any event, and there is no substantive opposition to presidential decisions.Its predecessor was the Supreme Council of Belarus (until 1996).