Cornel West quits Harvard after failing to win tenure
Leading black intellectual and activist returns to Columbia-affiliated seminary

Leading black intellectual and activist returns to Columbia-affiliated seminary

Recession-driven domestic surge more than compensates for loss of international students at some institutions Down Under

Royal Statistical Society president Sylvia Richardson says pandemic has sparked huge interest in the discipline and highlighted body’s vital public role

Wayne State president calls major research institution inappropriate destination for Hispanic-focused funding

Universities often reproduce colonial logics by exploiting, commodifying and diluting the very ‘thing’ that was to set us free, says Manvir Grewal

Female students face barriers in fields such as military studies and mining

Absence of sector-wide information regarding Sino-British research invites political attack from China hawks, warns study led by prime minister’s brother

THE’s Careers Clinic brings together the great and the good of higher education to answer a burning careers question

Grim statistics on single-honours enrolments belie an explosion in joint-honours provision, says Katherine Astbury

Lincoln Allison enjoys a broad, sometimes speculative account of the mania for written constitutions that took hold in the 1750s

Demise of ACICS, favoured by for-profits, still leaves larger problem of venue shopping

SOAS scholar says free speech is not an on/off switch and speakers could be invited on certain terms

A video by a professor for only their class is akin to the single-copy, handwritten book disseminated to just one room of people, says David Kellermann

Departures of Timnit Gebru and Margaret Mitchell has prompted academics to ask if they should reconsider links with the technology giant

Observers detect message that caution on criticism is price of increased funding, but suspect balancing act will be difficult to sustain