‘I understand anger over v-c pay’, says new Cambridge head
Institution’s Canadian leader tackles executive remuneration, Brexit and diversifying the university’s student intake in THE interview

Institution’s Canadian leader tackles executive remuneration, Brexit and diversifying the university’s student intake in THE interview

Academic work is typically all-consuming, but some scholars still manage to combine some eye-catching sidelines with their day jobs. Here, five tell their stories

A study of far-right fringe groups in Italy is too forgiving and uncritical, says R. J. B. Bosworth

Matthew Feldman praises a sharp and clear-sighted examination of the new extreme forms of right-wing politics in the US

The scholar of East European studies and author of Red Hangover on reading for escape, quoting Lenin at the Model United Nations and understanding everyday life ‘behind the Iron Curtain’

An unsettling study of patients in comas reveals that consciousness endures, says Shane O’Mara

A provocative study into a controversial subject is let down by a dense, academic style, says Deborah D. Rogers

Observers say key issue is whether review’s remit is wide-ranging, or set to predetermined objectives

Father of ‘fuzzy logic’ remembered

The research excellence framework’s panels will look at factors including adventurousness, disciplinary diversity and methodological clarity, predicts Martin Willis

The Leicester space physicist on winning Astronauts, exploring uncharted mountains, and scientists’ social skills

Focusing on your own priorities makes it possible to enjoy an easier and more productive working life, says Mark Reed

Newer prizes that reward scientific teams are fairer and more representative, says Martin Rees