International student policy at stake in UK Cabinet reshuffle
James Cleverly becomes home secretary as former prime minister David Cameron replaces him as foreign secretary
James Cleverly becomes home secretary as former prime minister David Cameron replaces him as foreign secretary
Shitij Kapur fears country’s world-leading universities face ‘triangle of sadness’ as problems with student debt, university finances and staff discontent pile up
Graduates would pay higher contributions over shorter time to make system ‘self-funding’ and solve funding crisis in proposal from dataHE co-founder
Even as many universities struggle to keep the lights on, others reap the rewards of strong investment and tumult elsewhere, writes Pola Lem
Late researcher’s reform narrative chimes with Australian accord considerations
CUHK scholar sacked days after being denied re-entry to island says room for China-critical research is shrinking
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media
Potsdam president foresees shift to focus on prompt engineering in teaching – but another AI expert thinks it is just another professional skill to rank alongside ‘can use Excel’
The general secretary’s visibility makes her a natural target for discontent, but many of the blunders arose from committee decisions, says Dyfrig Jones
Only a small minority of institutions adopting climate change policies common in the private sector, finds report
Universities operating in difficult environments can have more of an impact by pooling resources, summit hears
Minister heads for education secretary job having fought ‘culture wars’ against universities, but policy change may hinge on survival of Johnson government
Leaders argue that integrating operations will strengthen specialisms, but students give plans a frosty reception
In the article “Young academics’ research ‘elegant but not interesting’ ” (News, 23 February), Richard Robison, discussing the increasing “conservatism” of young scholars’ papers, says: “Ironically,...
The UK government should be doing more to help students survive the cost-of-living crisis, not dissuading them from studying, says Zahir Irani