Risk of compulsory redundancies as 170 staff face axe at UEA
Announcement follows the departure of 400 staff members last year as efforts to close budget black hole continue

Announcement follows the departure of 400 staff members last year as efforts to close budget black hole continue

President-elect says ally will ‘send education back to the states’ after pledging to get rid of department entirely

Welsh regulator’s perceived failure to follow English sector lead on preventing misconduct seen as contributing to ‘patchy’ protections

Freely available tool performs strongly in trials against human interviewers and traditional online surveys

Shrinking humanities departments reducing options for those who wish to study close to home, finds British Academy

Would-be international students opt to enrol closer to home, with continental Europe, Asian hubs and the Gulf seen as alternatives for learners locked out of ‘big four’

Prolonged integrity problems, ongoing visa chaos, harsher caps to come: the post-caps prospects for Australian international education

Burnout is rife in an era when the traditional attractions of academia to obsessives are diluted by many new duties, observes Joseph Cronin

Universities need £60 million boost from Holyrood budget to avoid further cuts to per-student funding, says IFS

Ex-HKU law professor receives longest sentence to date under controversial national security law

Institutions switch to online learning as air pollution levels soar

Country could accommodate more overseas learners, according to poll of locals’ attitudes

Leading professor says he is likely to leave UK to avoid tax hit, and fears others may be reluctant to come in the first place

Universities raise quality concerns as regulator sets end-of-year cut-off for transition to digital credits

Many credit right-wing influencer Charlie Kirk with mobilising young white college voters across key swing states