The week in higher education – 8 March 2018
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media

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

Tributes paid to pioneering cardiac researcher

Publish before your viva, distinguish opportunities from time-drains and have a strong online profile, says Helen Coleman

The next warden of Rhodes House on growing up in a family of political refugees and why universities must prepare graduates to be good citizens

Book of the week: Eliane Glaser on how authoritarians get an opening when party elites play with populist fires

In Hormonal, Martie Haselton writes in a style that is lively, popular and confessional, but still scientifically rigorous – a bit like chick lit with footnotes

Mathematicians – and, indeed, other scholars – who cooperate with intelligence agencies face a moral dilemma knowing that their research could well be applied in unethical ways, says Michael Harris

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

The official weekly newsletter of the University of Poppleton. Finem respice!

Universities need to confront, rather than ignore, uncomfortable questions about the worth of higher education to be in with a fighting chance

Economist Bryan Caplan considers tangible benefits, inconvenient truths and wonders whether Latin and poetry are worth the effort when ‘Kardashian’ trumps ‘Shakespeare’ in Google search results
While I agree with Fiona Whelan on the importance of university support staff to institutions, and concur that universities could do more to appreciate them, I have to disagree with the comments...
In his criticism of Spiked’s Free Speech University Rankings, “Frankly, the Free Speech Rankings are misleading, ill-informed and worryingly influential” (Opinion, 22 February), Carl Thompson fails...