Käthe Kollwitz: Prints, Process, Politics, edited by Louis Marchesano
Esther Leslie is impressed by a rich and detailed study of a haunting artist

Esther Leslie is impressed by a rich and detailed study of a haunting artist

With Brexit, we’re on the precipice of a new world order, but UK universities have first mover advantage if they act fast, says Simon Marginson

A look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Book of the week: Victoria Bateman is impressed by the clear and wide-ranging insights of a Nobel-winning economist and public intellectual

Letting go of acrimony is not easy after three years of trench warfare. But post-Brexit Britain needs academics and their evidence-led approach

Michael Marinetto learns some crucial lessons about good writing and research

Robin Wilson enjoys a lively account of how we learned that we’ll never be able to square the circle or meet a number of other challenges posed by the ancient Greeks

Lincoln Allison looks back to an age of tougher marking and considers what, if anything, we need to do about the historically inevitable slide towards grade inflation

With careers riding on young scientists’ position in author lists, friction is all too common. A snowballing initiative to list authors’ contributions aims to make sure credit is always given where...

The artist and King’s College London fellow discusses the relationship between research and art, and how climate change is reshaping her work

Tributes paid to Irish expert on French literature who ‘recognised languages as a key to future opportunities in Europe’

‘Commercial entanglements’ a deadweight on prosperity, Australian university insists

Researchers say that conservative Christian beliefs do not necessarily conflict with belief in concepts such as evolution

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media