Decolonising the music curriculum should be an adagio movement
Careful thought is required before Western art music is condemned and cast out, says James Olsen
Careful thought is required before Western art music is condemned and cast out, says James Olsen
A large survey of students suggests that even Democrats are afraid to air their views on certain subjects. This isn’t healthy, says Samuel Abrams
Luxembourg, 17 April 2002 Full text I EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1. The EEA EFTA States welcome the proposal for the regulation on genetically modified (GM) food and feed. This represents a major initiative...
Brussels, 5 June 2002 Proposal for a Council Directive on the control of high activity sealed radioactive sources. Comments on the above proposal from the German delegation. Cover note. Brussels, 28...
Time-honoured standards of professionalism appear to be unravelling. Authors should be entitled to demand better, says Harvey Graff
Sector experts offer their advice for Liz Truss and her new Cabinet on some of the biggest issues facing UK universities, from finances and R&D to culture wars and common ground
Philip Augar issues warning on LLE, but Lord Willetts fears new government ‘would like to’ restrict higher education entry
Are research careers meritocratic? Do universities do enough to support researchers? Is impact more important than publications? Is interdisciplinarity the key to new discoveries? Can...
Reliance on student reviews of university teaching has led to a warped understanding of quality, says Sally Patfield
From threats to the humanities to the future of universities themselves, the risks of misunderstanding what to value seem to be growing
The regulations can be ambiguous, but the masturbation paper furore is a result of supervisors’ and reviewers’ lack of vigilance, says Michelle Shipworth
Bringing students into departmental conversations on standards safeguarding can reinvigorate a process that has served UK universities well for almost 200 years, says Clare Peddie
If authors are no longer required to justify their fundamental assumptions, where does that leave referees, asks Martyn Hammersley
Major THE poll considers pressures on academic and administrative staff, how this has changed in recent years and what can be done to improve matters
Unbounded discussions develop the critical but playful thinking that allows people to safely challenge and be challenged, says Lee Cronin