Disabled academics need a bigger say in sector, says professor
Evolving norms, expectations and laws usher both risk and opportunity for universities, according to blind law scholar

Evolving norms, expectations and laws usher both risk and opportunity for universities, according to blind law scholar

Would someone who found effective software for their department never have to buy a beer again? Not according to my survey, says Paul Breen

Vice-chancellor announces ‘major independent review’ after acknowledging ‘in several areas we fell very short’

European University Association says being forced to disclose international funding could lead to institutions being wrongly ‘suspected of representing foreign interests’

SET University president Iryna Volnytska discusses the challenges of building a new institution in wartime

Dismissal over workload dispute ‘merely the latest ploy’ in Australian university’s long-running campaign to oust ‘conservative academic’

Provinces promise action against private operators, but universities fear Trudeau is going too far, too fast, without consulting sector

Far from being elitist, UCU Left members see collective decision-making as key to campaigning strength, says general secretary candidate Saira Weiner

Partnership with Institute for Replication will support reproduction and replication attempts tied to papers published from 2023 onwards

University wants to drop ‘Central’ and become ‘The University of Lancashire’, as existing location description has ‘little or no current relevance or meaning’

Experts describe drop as disappointing but caution that a number of statistical reasons could be behind the decrease

Head of UK Research and Innovation announces she will not seek to stay in office beyond next year

Eighty finalists from 17 countries and territories in the running across 10 categories, as prestigious awards enter sixth year

A change in atmosphere has encouraged academics to return to the country where they were once maligned, but funding pressures and issues with polarisation continue

In Vermont, a flagship for the first time counts more freshmen from a neighbouring state than from its own population