Fallen women’s studies
The erosion of women’s, gender and sexuality studies in UK universities will prove detrimental to the academy and wider society, argues Lisa Downing

The erosion of women’s, gender and sexuality studies in UK universities will prove detrimental to the academy and wider society, argues Lisa Downing

After one epic throw Chris Hackley was a Titan among boys, but unlike the object he propelled his sporting career never took flight

Aaron Rosen is entranced by the V&A’s daring exhibition, where words and art fuse to bring a dystopian vision to life

Jules Pretty sets course on a journey across the oceans that haunt our imaginations

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

The platitude is right after all, says Steven Schwartz - it is better to give than receive

Mary Evans relishes this re-evaluation of a landmark work’s collective construction

Tim Birkhead on bird fanciers’ engagement with nature

Judith Bara on the politicisation of celebrities and the celebritisation of politicians

Roger Morgan on the interwoven histories of European nations over six centuries

This ranking celebrates the future Harvards and Berkeleys - but only genuine youngsters can keep their places, explains Phil Baty

Phil Baty on the institutions creating valuable niches for themselves in a fast-changing environment

The 100 Under 50 helps to correct the bias towards traditional universities manifest in most rankings and gives a sense of the deeper intellectual resources being tapped by new ones, argues Peter...

In a white-water world, young universities have to grow up quickly, says Roy Crawford

David Willetts describes how coalition reforms are creating a new generation of universities fit to join the 1960s wave