Ten Popes Who Shook the World
Like it or loathe it, you can't really ignore the papacy. It's the world's oldest dynasty, and it commands the loyalty of nearly a fifth of the world's population and the attention of a great many...
Like it or loathe it, you can't really ignore the papacy. It's the world's oldest dynasty, and it commands the loyalty of nearly a fifth of the world's population and the attention of a great many...
Links between universities and manufacturing could help make Britain 'great' again. John Morgan writes
Scientists and novelists have joined forces to pen dramatic tales of discovery. Matthew Reisz writes
A researcher from Bournemouth University has published what he describes as a pioneering example of "scholarship in the guise of a film script".
United StatesPreferential, not equal treatmentA US university was justified in challenging one of its students over the compatibility of her views on homosexuality with her training as a counsellor,...

While covering the Arab Spring, photography tutor Guy Martin was injured in a blast that has left a lasting legacy. Matthew Reisz writes

Local outreach initiatives forge ahead after 'absurd' closure of national programme. Jack Grove writes
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH RESEARCHHealth Technology Assessment programme• Award winner: Rachel Jordan• Institution: University of Birmingham• Value: £240,112Supported self-management for patients...

Unexpected institutional failure would accelerate 'polarised' borrowing trend. Simon Baker reports
Whistleblowers contacted England's funding council 18 times in the past two years, alerting it to allegations that included pressure being put on staff to lie during an audit and the manipulation of...

Bizarre FoI requests waste university resources, say fatigued staff. David Matthews writes

Big reductions in teacher training places could see 'infrastructure lost for ever'. Sarah Cunnane reports

The winner of a university's Postgraduate Research Image of the Year posed the question: "Is technology the missing piece of the puzzle for cancer?"
London Metropolitan University is set to cut its administration costs by up to 50 per cent by sharing services with other institutions, bringing "some staff losses and some staff gains".

But undergraduates' confidence in their abilities isn't echoed by employers, as Jack Grove reports