US Republicans get harder pushback over free speech and Gaza
As politicians stage another public hearing to shame academia, university leaders display new level of resistance, joined by students at Harvard and California system

As politicians stage another public hearing to shame academia, university leaders display new level of resistance, joined by students at Harvard and California system

Plans to move University Post to intranet amid cost-cutting criticised by journalists

Lai Ching-te uses inauguration speech to ask for return of mainland students to island universities but installation accompanied by rising cross-Strait tensions

Emotions and rhetoric run high, but student campers are packing up

ATEC must work to ensure that under-represented groups aren’t cut adrift from the knowledge economy just as it moves up a gear, says Shamit Saggar

Members of Oxford Action for Palestine accessed office of vice-chancellor Irene Tracey

Key post-study work rights to be kept under review but reprieve puts off any changes at least until after coming general election

How can UK higher education be saved?

As universities in both the UK and Australia fight to protect vital international recruitment, there is also a need for fresh thinking for future prosperity

Rishi Sunak’s decision to hold a snap poll leaves several key sector issues hanging as political focus switches to electioneering

Eighty per cent drop in number of family members given permission to come to UK

Poll finds most researchers are using AI but only a tiny number trust technology companies on data privacy

With the right support, academics with visual impairments are prospering, but barriers to true inclusivity remain, says Kate Armond, while a lecturer reflects on how practice on reasonable...

The higher education researcher reflects on transitioning between Australian and Chinese institutions and how universities are searching for ‘new deals’

Energy required to run and cool supercomputers is at odds with universities’ sustainability targets, particularly in hotter parts of the world