Canada opts for middle ground
THES reporters look at global developments in stem-cell research and legislation. American researchers seeking a more liberal terrain for stem-cell research could find a haven in Canada, where new...
THES reporters look at global developments in stem-cell research and legislation. American researchers seeking a more liberal terrain for stem-cell research could find a haven in Canada, where new...
THES reporters look at global developments in stem-cell research and legislation. The promise of bespoke spare parts made from your own cells will require major advances in tissue engineering. The...
THES reporters look at global developments in stem-cell research and legislation. Millions of charity dollars raised in the United States are to back British embryonic stem-cell (es-cell) research in...
THES reporters look at global developments in stem-cell research and legislation. A key stem-cell patent may ultimately prove invalid in Europe, according to a leading scientist, writes Steve Farrar...
THES reporters look at global developments in stem-cell research and legislation. More than 60 different human embryonic stem-cell lines have been developed from excess embryos created for in vitro...
Indian enthusiasm for British higher education appears to be at fever pitch. Police were called in to control crowds at this month's education fairs. Security guards at a fair in Chennai (formerly...
Partnership rights for gay couples are basic human rights, and religious doctrines should be irrelevant when devising secular laws enshrining them, argues Robert Wintemute. At first glance, some...
Pedro Teixeira and Alberto Amaral examine the rise of private provision in education overseas. With the rapid expansion of higher education in recent decades it seemed to make sense to increase the...
Oprah Winfrey? Martha Stewart? Stephen Phillips explains how a $38 million gift to the Smithsonian sparked a storm over donations. Businesswoman Catherine Reynolds's decision last month to back out...
A tiny flat in Cambridge will set you back £130,000 while a Parisian pied-a-terre could be yours for £39,000 - so what are you waiting for? asks Jennifer Wallace. A square in Montmartre. Wicker cafe...
The New DNB still has the good, the bad and the ugly, but women and crime victims are better represented than before, says Huw Richards. Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen, Florence Maybrick, Neville Heath,...
Ethnomusicologists are looking to the future as much as to the past in exploring diverse musical traditions, says Michael Church. Cometh the hour, cometh the man: the fact that we know so much about...
It's tough getting art students excited about profit-and-loss accounts, but one day they'll thank you, says Jo Andrews. Since I gave birth for the first time 19 years ago, the mysteries of nature-...
This week's competition, in which you have to identify a book from its opening sentence, is from a novel set in a leper colony: "The cabin passenger wrote in his diary a parody of Descartes: 'I feel...
Mechatronics and the Design of Intelligent Machines and Systems