The BBC: The Myth of a Public Service, by Tom Mills
Has the corporation acted as an arm of the state in the past, and might it in the future? Ivor Gaber wonders

Has the corporation acted as an arm of the state in the past, and might it in the future? Ivor Gaber wonders

A.W. Purdue on the man whose narcissism led to his becoming a mouthpiece for the Nazis

Duncan Wu on the art of biography

The latest recommended reading takes in a Marxist view of the history of the US academy, Norse sagas (walrus penis bone, check), leisure time inequality, and American army victors and their spoils

A round-up of recent recipients of research council cash

The government’s partnership with universities has been good for all; Anthony Monaco hopes the new administration will strengthen it

Philip G. Altbach and Hans de Wit foresee a bleak future for America’s global excellence and competitiveness

Who can enter whose washrooms in US public universities should be a matter for kindness and common sense, not ideology, says Felipe Fernández-Armesto
During four decades of attacks on tenure and shared governance in universities, the one thing that academics have historically been permitted to retain is a system of academic esteem bestowed by...
“Myths about the impact of having a surname starting with a letter late in the alphabet have been debunked by a new analysis,” according to the article on Tolga Yuret’s study in Scientometrics (“End-...
Your selection of The Diversity Bargain: And Other Dilemmas of Race, Admissions and Meritocracy at Elite Universities by Natasha Warikoo as the book of the week (Books, 27 October) and the reporting...
Your article rightly notes that the results of the UK Engagement Survey could have implications for the proposed teaching excellence framework, although it doesn’t explicitly state that the survey...

As scholars in the UK and US mull the future after Trump’s triumph and Brexit, academics must focus on making society’s walls fall