Some cheats are enterprising, if not moral
Christopher Bigsby on those who take a creative approach to academic rigour

Christopher Bigsby on those who take a creative approach to academic rigour

A surgeon finds that what empowers terminally ill patients is humane honesty, finds Helen Bynum

Sharon Wheeler applauds a rigorous and passionate appraisal of Conan Doyle’s literary contemporaries

Are we primarily biological entities, or embodied consciousnesses? Christopher Belshaw on a fine book examining the arguments

A thoughtful study on joblessness has little to say on the most pressing problems, finds Kitty Stewart

John Shand on a message that is undermined exaggeration

Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones on a study of the muscle and myth movies of the 1950s and 1960s

The Indiana Jones of biology is an engaging guide in this marine detective story, says Philip Hoare

Eileen Pollard on a collection of interviews capturing important truths about the doctoral process

Paul Bernal finds much to admire in this compelling examination of the diverse events the group has been involved in

Students’ union objects to change that will make thousands ineligible for extra weeks of support via ‘long courses loans’

REF analysis suggests that new system for allocating funds has ‘no correspondence with excellence in research impact’

Multi-faulty? - The good, the bad and the ugly of multidisciplinary, do-it-all departments

Plan to force overseas students to leave the UK after graduation appears to have been blocked by George Osborne

Middlesex University has announced that Michael Driscoll is to retire as vice-chancellor, to be replaced by The Open University’s Tim Blackman