BIS advises Europe to go green for growth
European Union funding for research and innovation should be more focused on green growth, according to a Department for Business, Innovation and Skills report.
European Union funding for research and innovation should be more focused on green growth, according to a Department for Business, Innovation and Skills report.
The University of Birmingham sent senior administrators to two US institutions for a “transatlantic summit” as part of its preparations for the UK’s more market-oriented funding regime.
Lord Sainsbury of Turville, the businessman and former science minister, has been nominated by the University of Cambridge to succeed the Duke of Edinburgh as chancellor after the royal stands down...

Rankings provide insights that can help guide policymakers, but politicians must be aware of their inherent limitations, says Phil Baty
A number of universities fear that up to a third of overseas postgraduate students may fail to take up their places this autumn due to changes to visa rules, it has been claimed.

Andrew Oswald considers recent moves in economics, famously the most dismal of sciences, to take the happiness and psychological health of the population as seriously as a country's GDP
Can science provide the ultimate explanation of human nature? No, says Simon Blackburn, who tells us there's life in the philosophical armchair yet

A return to the beginning of history recasts the story of modernisation. Frank Furedi is enlightened

Christoph Bode gets a backstage pass to the creation of a scholar's fiction and his academic work
Like so many other people, I am often tired and drowning in a morass of demands. At these times I long to be somewhere calm, hot and by the sea because, as Jessica Jacobs points out, a beach holiday...
Does the world need another book about Richard Feynman? The legendary physicist's life and work is nothing if not well documented. There are scholarly studies of his main contributions to science, in...
Will the world be steered by a benign hegemon or by darker forces? Andrew Gamble wonders
This is an elegant book. The elegance begins with its appearance: slender, with sparing cover adornment in subdued colours, and no capital letters in the title or the author's name. It continues with...
More than 72 years after his death, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk is still omnipresent in Turkey. Travellers arrive at Istanbul's Atatürk International Airport, pass the Atatürk Stadium on their way into the...
John Harris finds perverse enjoyment in a gleefully bleak consideration of the meaning of life