Examiners give hugely different marks
Study finds inconsistencies in grading for borderline 2:1 and 2:2 essays

Study finds inconsistencies in grading for borderline 2:1 and 2:2 essays

Which institutions are building the reserves to cushion potential shocks from uncapped student recruitment and rocketing research costs?

Journalists who set the news agenda have short attention spans. By helping them, researchers can help to get coverage for their work

Megan Dunn sets out priorities as she defends the right to occupy

Academics at a British Academy event discuss the purpose of the history of political thought

The marks of private provider’s first cohort of graduates make Anthony Grayling feel more vindicated than ever

In this general election, visiting the polling station seems more pointless than ever, says Felipe Fernández-Armesto

A staging of the 1647 Putney Debates poses inconvenient questions about political means and ends, says Liz Schafer

A major figure’s rise and fall reveals a gap between discourse and reality, Barbara Graziosi finds

The tales of a society on the margins and a researcher’s struggle to integrate into that society make for a readable account about real people, says Joy Hendry

This valuable work sheds light on the building of an ‘international sisterhood’ to further the struggle for women’s rights, says June Purvis

Robyn Arianrhod welcomes an unsentimental study of the first woman to win a Nobel prize

E. Stina Lyon on a complex account of the trajectory of adult life in the modern world

Neil Gregor praises an assiduously researched, humane book that examines the incarceration of German-Jews prior to 1939

The value of donations peaks at £807m, annual Ross/CASE survey finds, but challenges of limited outreach and elite domination persist