Overseas enrolment set to plummet under Norway’s fees plan
Government expects international enrolment to fall by 70 per cent after introduction of tuition fees for students from outside the EU
Government expects international enrolment to fall by 70 per cent after introduction of tuition fees for students from outside the EU
Academics believe regime is ‘unlikely’ to silence ‘spirit of opposition’ gaining momentum across hundreds of campuses
Entrepreneurs are the new kings, but academics doing basic research are key to our future – and they need proper funding, says Brian Schmidt
As it emerges from its Covid isolation, Australia is rolling back restrictions on foreign students and graduates in the hope of ushering more of them into its depleted workforce. But amid competitive...
Local store gets huge punitive court-ordered payout over campaign castigating its 2016 pursuit of shoplifting black student
Unbounded discussions develop the critical but playful thinking that allows people to safely challenge and be challenged, says Lee Cronin
The academic and civil rights crusader talks about a mother who showed her how to stand up for herself and for others
Separate breaches in one week trigger concerns over lack of awareness in the sector
As precarity affects ever more academics for ever longer, many have come to see a permanent position as the gateway to professional happiness. But does it always work out that way? Or do the...
Chinese-Australian material scientist explains the downside of fashion, and why hunger therapy can be a good thing
Australia’s oldest university library adopts new protocols for acknowledgement, representation and access to indigenous material
Ukrainian philologist who found a host university while in a 10-hour queue at the border talks about a life upended
Recent measures prevent women from participating in academic conferences or graduation ceremonies
Universities keep seeking local jobs for their overseas graduates, despite ‘massive’ economic pivot to Asia
If universities were mainstream businesses they would be in the category of bloated, oligopolistic conglomerates, says Timothy Devinney