Bitter Reckoning: Israel Tries Holocaust Survivors as Nazi Collaborators, by Dan Porat
Giulia Miller is intrigued by a little-known episode in early Israeli history

Giulia Miller is intrigued by a little-known episode in early Israeli history

Richard J. Williams is not totally won over to the planners’ view of the world

Mateusz Zatoński is disappointed by an ambitious overview of the development of smoking

THE’s data editor Simon Baker explains how he used student population and general election data to make some poll predictions for the 2019 General Election

A decade dominated first by austerity and then by Brexit has brought UK higher education to a tipping point as the election looms

Team effort: Are cooperative universities the future of HE?

The humanities can embrace certain forms of vocationalism without betraying their essential nature and value, argues Kevin Vanzant

Vicky Blake outlines recommendations from the University and College Union’s democracy commission, established after intense infighting at the union’s 2018 congress

The former Sussex vice-chancellor on coming late to reading, his long fascination with India and different interpretations of the colonial era

Old and new home trade compliments, as former deputy calls time on six-year sojourn out west

Book of the week: Emma Rees praises a brilliantly wide-ranging study of the menopause across the centuries

Australian representative bodies back consolidation of education and training portfolios, as tide comes back in again