Labour manifesto: a weak case for ending fees
John Morgan looks at errors and inadequacies in leaked plans for higher education

John Morgan looks at errors and inadequacies in leaked plans for higher education

The leading forensic anthropologist discusses her Presbyterian work ethic, remaining detached in the face of human suffering, and unhelpful advice from a PhD supervisor

Analysis finds new bachelor’s graduates do well in labour market, particularly those from more practically focused universities

Seven academic leaders share their experiences at the departmental helm along with their tips on how to squeeze the best out of sceptical staff and meagre budgets – and still find time for research

Steven Vaughan admires a powerful, rich and moving legal history of same-sex union

Laura Bowater appreciates a layperson’s guide to identifying scientific fact from fiction

What use is the Bard? In politics or life, what you do with his plays is up to you, finds Peter J. Smith

Vicky Duckworth on the injustice and discrimination that means many working women do not fulfil their potential

Overemphasis of traditional academic silos is not preparing young people to address the environmental, political and biomedical abyss opening up before us, says Eric Macfarlane

Medieval employment practice used by University of Amsterdam may help to preserve under-threat humanities disciplines, experts say

Analysis of scholarly publishing’s ‘Napster’ shows that academics are not prepared to wait to access research

In Hungary, Poland, Germany and elsewhere, populist politicians are taking aim at the discipline

International Higher Education Group aims to reduce costs and increase choice for international students eyeing up Western universities

‘Peculiar’ experiment fails to find link between physical appearance and grades