The sound of gentrification
Expensive food, fancy glamping and questionable hats: from Sonisphere, Emma Rees reflects on 27 years of music festivals

Expensive food, fancy glamping and questionable hats: from Sonisphere, Emma Rees reflects on 27 years of music festivals

‘Breakdown in personal relationship’ of senior figures must also be addressed

The two winning entries in our competition explore the arguments for and against independence and what it might mean for the academy

The NSS does not give an accurate representation of student feeling, according to more than half of university staff responding to a straw poll.

The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council aims to accelerate both scientific breakthroughs and social and economic impact.

Maryam Mirzakhani has become the first woman to win the Fields Medal in the history of the world’s most prestigious mathematics prize.

A majority of adults in England support reduced tuition fees for students from lower income families, according to a survey for the Sutton Trust

The public have been asked to help shape the new science and innovation strategy due out in the autumn

Students are most satisfied with teaching, least happy with assessment and feedback

By Scott Jaschik, for Inside Higher Ed

The medical journal The Lancet has defended its decision to publish an open letter condemning Israel’s military action in Gaza

Scientific publishers producing model copyright licences will make it harder for academic research to be a “first class citizen of the web”.

MPs warn it is “highly doubtful” the Scottish government’s position on tuition fees would be legally sustainable if the country became independent
Times Higher Education has launched a survey to see whether Scottish university staff believe leaving the UK would be good for their institutions

A University of Cambridge student has accused the NUS of encouraging Hamas to ensure “as many children as possible die” through its Israel boycott