Science Policy under Thatcher, by Jon Agar
Richard Joyner remembers a difficult era for British science

Richard Joyner remembers a difficult era for British science

Luca Dal Zilio welcomes a compelling insider’s account of our increasing understanding of the science of earthquakes

University is often the first chance to live independently. Here’s how to get the most out of it.

Tributes paid to a scholar with ‘empathy’ for understanding people of different faiths

A.W. Purdue is unconvinced by an attempt to put military planning on a more scientific footing

Zoë Waxman considers an analysis of the age-old tendency to report people next door to the authorities

Book of the week: Kerry Brown applauds a nonagenarian’s analysis of ‘one of the world’s key relationships’

New twist in case which triggered departure of vice-chancellor and management dean

Former deputy Liberal leader to assume the reins from Gareth Evans

Matthew Reisz considers the tools we need to explore the wilder shores of performance art

‘Hong Kong Principles’ aim to tackle ‘perverse incentives’ in metrics-based policies and university promotion criteria

Transparency, openness and integrity should be the measures by which we judge research, not volume and citations, argues Mai Har Sham

Countries can boost each other’s prospects with a united appeal to colossal research funding scheme, say sector leaders

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media