Knowledge for Sale: The Neoliberal Takeover of Higher Education, by Lawrence Busch
Comparing free-market politics with state socialism may be an intellectual dead end, says Aniko Horvath

Comparing free-market politics with state socialism may be an intellectual dead end, says Aniko Horvath

June Purvis on the female pioneers on the frontline in the war to end all wars

East Asia’s most iconic garment is as dynamic as any Western mode of dress, finds Joy Hendry

John Shand appreciates a study of how humans cope when life throws them a curve ball

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

Peer review process punishes academics who ‘challenge the dogma’ of their field, scientists claim

Serious novels promote the trust and people skills that societies need. They should be required reading for all degrees, says Peter Taylor-Gooby

As tactics to maximise rankings become common knowledge and fluctuation diminishes, universities will re-focus on a diversifying array of missions, says Merlin Crossley

The work of 500 scientists transformed the 20th century. Universities and funders must do more to make certain that the flow of groundbreaking discoveries continues, says Donald Braben

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Economics, modernised; remembering Bob Crow; the emergence of globalisation from a war-torn world; Big Brother; and a history of squatting

Book of the week: Fred Inglis yearns for post-1964 insights from the life of an icon of the intellectual Left

The Naylor report will test the willingness of Justin Trudeau’s government to overhaul research support, writes Creso Sá