Pundit Paul unravels Italy's politics
A former Cambridge reader in European politics has become Italy's most sought-after pundit on the country's complex political, economic and social problems. Paul Ginsborg arrived in Italy in 1992 to...
A former Cambridge reader in European politics has become Italy's most sought-after pundit on the country's complex political, economic and social problems. Paul Ginsborg arrived in Italy in 1992 to...
A REVISED package of measures aimed at modernising Chile's 16 state universities is finally scheduled to be passed in the next few weeks. The State Universities Framework Law supersedes the original...
A NEW research centre in Mexico City has been asked to investigate the relationship between students' study habits and their exam results. In a country where libraries are inadequate, books are...
ACADEMICS and students in Brazil have united to block the planned sell-off of Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, the world's largest mining company. Brokers Merrill Lynch had drawn up the sell-off tender...
WHEN Concordia professor Valery Fabrikant was convicted of killing four colleagues in 1992 the university called in an outside expert to review its administration. Harry Arthurs delivered a harsh...
AS BRITAIN'S New Labour government begins to put its education policies in practice, a defeated Labor Party in Australia is preparing a dramatic overhaul of its previous attitudes to how universities...
YORK University students were hurriedly sent back to finish their last week of classes less than 24 hours after their professors voted to end the longest strike in Canadian university history, writes...
THE EDITOR of The THES has wisely identified credit accumulation and transfer (CATS) as one of the keys to the future development of higher education, and one with profound implications. It has been...
This is union meeting season, the Association of University Teachers' council last week, Natfhe starting tomorrow and Unison next week. Futher and higher education unions are in a difficult bind....
UNIVERSITIES will look with some unease at this week's report on the infrastructure for academic research (page three), produced by a forum including major research funders in the public, private and...
Peter Dolton and Anna Vignoles challenge the notion that Britain has too many students. The higher education sector in the United Kingdom has experienced virtually continuous growth in student...
Academics should be in the forefront of the campaign to press the new Labour administration to open up government, argue Iain McLean and Greg Terrill. So the Labour government will not introduce a...
ANTHEA MILLETT's letter about La Sainte Union, Southampton (THES, May 16), prompts two comments. The decision of the governing body not to appeal against withdrawal of its accreditation by the...
TWO comments, one question, a task, and a moral (sounds like a good movie - I hope Hugh Grant is free!) relating to Harriet Swain's excellent discussion of the postmodernist critique of history (THES...
YOU report (THES, May 9) that Brian Fender, chief executive of the Higher Education Funding Council for England, "has urged universities and colleges to be more open about the way they distribute...