Australian universities face court and bots in ‘wage theft’ war
Ombudsman pledges crackdown if institutions fail to come clean
Ombudsman pledges crackdown if institutions fail to come clean
Mood among academics, students and administrators swinging behind compulsory jabs
The Nottingham historian discusses founding a library in the Indian village where he grew up and the need for alternatives to the ‘false promises of neoliberal education’
Compulsory modules on good conduct risk causing more problems than they solve, says Binoy Kampmark
Melbourne team focuses on ‘unsexy’ end of the next big thing in biomedicine
Despite scepticism about the business model, short courses prove an earner for cash-starved institutions
While Antipodean institutions have fended off competition from Asia, the full impacts of Covid are yet to flow through
Asia operations are either being expanded or newly opened as the countries' universities aim to keep students engaged and enrolled
Becoming majority shareholder in branch campus will ‘secure the future’ of the institution in the region
With academic conferences on hold, novel ways of collaborating have taken off – from preprints and digital networks to AI-backed matchmaking, writes Jack Grove
Covid redundancy terms include non-disclosure and non-disparagement obligations, as corporate HR culture captures universities
Sydney and UNSW vow to collaborate more, while shrugging off snarky stereotypes
The retiring UBC scientist on inspirational partners, the precarious state of career options, and the formative value of stink bombs
Pride Month may be over but inclusion needs year-round commitment that goes beyond noisy and colourful gestures, says Karen Lambert
Back-to-back publication reinforces findings, and preprints could facilitate it. So why are journals still so wary of it, asks Josh Hardy