Zero-tolerance campus drug policies ‘do more harm than good’
‘We are not excusing illegal behaviour, but we are acknowledging that it happens and appears widespread’, says Hepi paper advocating harm reduction approach

‘We are not excusing illegal behaviour, but we are acknowledging that it happens and appears widespread’, says Hepi paper advocating harm reduction approach

Academics who did not disclose sexual orientation more likely to produce fewer papers, according to surveys

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media

But one expert suggests closer ties with Beijing may not be as straightforward as Kremlin thinks

All academics have had that anxiety dream about standing up to give a lecture, only to realise they have forgotten to prepare anything – or to put on any clothes. But real teaching failures are...

Frozen fee levels must rise eventually, but universities need to deliver efficiency gains through hybrid learning, says David Willetts

Epic fails: what academics have learned from their biggest teaching disasters

The Augar response highlights ministers’ hopes that rising costs will make certain courses economically unviable, says Alexis Brown

Universities brace as hot labour market beckons locals who kept them afloat through Covid

Threshold indexing change, not mentioned by DfE in media briefings, brings lifetime hit of up to £19,000 for ‘lower middling earners’ who took out loans after 2012

The unrelenting social pressure to take on all domestic duties leaves women little time for professional advancement, says Sabrin Ramadhan

Symbolic and practical support has come from across Europe, but views differ on whether continued Russian cooperation could end or abet the conflict

Amid chaos, non-profit groups work to help an estimated 20,000 Indians leave war zone

Selective institutions again face backsliding in perennial challenge of guessing how many admitted students will accept

Orbán administration’s illiberal intrusions into institutional governance will be ‘difficult’ to reverse, say scholars