Rethink French immigration law, university leaders urge Macron
Restrictions would increase registration fees for non-EU learners, but plans to make international students pay returnable deposits for residence are already in doubt
Restrictions would increase registration fees for non-EU learners, but plans to make international students pay returnable deposits for residence are already in doubt
Codes’ vague, narrow and toothless provisions are failing to promote the safety and well-being of all university community members, says Richard Joseph
From satirical novels to US sitcoms and cop shows, academics have proved to be rich source material across many genres. Four writers argue the case for who can claim to be fiction’s greatest scholar
The Elizabeth Magill case notwithstanding, presidents should focus on how conflicts affect the primary mission of their university, says Nicholas Dirks
While Republicans seek momentum from fiery hearing and Penn ousting, professors gain clarity on the size of the fight ahead
New complaints scheme may help ensure more open debates on campuses in time but Gaza crisis necessitates action now, say campaigners
Five more institutions achieve gold awards after OfS resolves challenges to original ratings
Australia’s now-you-see-it, now-you-don’t approach reflects policy patterns in other leading education destinations
But institutions may face paying regulator’s costs under new proposals outlined by England’s new free speech champion
Times Higher Education journalists name the academics and administrators at the heart of the sector’s biggest debates over the past 12 months
‘If the government wants data, here’s the data,’ says dean, as study finds Māori and Pasifika remain under-represented in medical enrolments
The Covid Inquiry underlines the need to train political leaders to identify the best options under pressure, says former NAO director David Finlay
Minister tells THE he has been calling vice-chancellors directly when he receives reports of Jewish students feeling threatened
Allowing faulty papers to go unchallenged damages integrity and threatens dangerous real-world consequences, says Peter Bowbrick
Leaders of three elite universities berated in appearance before lawmakers alarmed by protests