Can Berkeley stay Berkeley?
University announces major strategic planning initiative to address long-term budgetary concerns. Colleen Flaherty reports for Inside Higher Ed
University announces major strategic planning initiative to address long-term budgetary concerns. Colleen Flaherty reports for Inside Higher Ed
Chancellor Nicholas Dirks explains the university’s branch campus strategy
Carol Christ, new leader of the Californian university, also plans ‘free speech year’ for students and staff to engage with topic
Accommodation shortages and spiralling rents are damaging the student experience and limiting universities’ expansion ambitions. But amid political turbulence, rising borrowing costs and a shrinking...
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media
Despite Brexit, Mauro Ferrari hopes for ‘reasonable construct’ that ‘allows scientists to do their job in the best possible way’
Jack Grove explores current strategies for widening participation in higher education, and finds out why improving access remains a huge challenge across the world, despite growing university...
Ukrainian professor turned politician Inna Sovsun on coordinating student resistance and why international scholars must boycott Russia
Laureate recalls his serendipitous route to chemistry and California, and how he would turn the UK’s ‘lean and mean’ science system into a world leader
Deep cuts may be reversed, but the Brazilian president’s anti-science rhetoric will do lasting damage, says John Aubrey Douglass
On 15 October 1971, the first edition of The Times Higher Education Supplement was published. In the five decades since, the publication now known as Times Higher Education has charted the expansion...
Berkeley chancellor says great public institutions can support their missions by looking for funding elsewhere
Winner of award for women in science in the developing world discusses growing up in a family of eight in Ghana and ‘feeling like Christmas’ when she is on a podium
Researchers studying coronavirus-related attacks urge universities in Europe, North America and Australia to do more to protect Asian students
Professors ride a wave of ‘public anger’ over coronavirus outbreak in airing anti-government views