William Perkins and the Making of a Protestant England, by W. B. Patterson
Alec Ryrie welcomes a study of an Elizabethan scholar that dispels a posthumous Puritan label

Alec Ryrie welcomes a study of an Elizabethan scholar that dispels a posthumous Puritan label

Fred Inglis on a collection of articles that touches on, but should have focused on, the corruption of universities by corporate forces

Robert Gellately on how Hitler’s forces tried to forge alliances with Muslims during the Second World War

Power building - Russia’s ambitious bid to modernise its higher education sector

We speak to London School of Economics’ chair of its court of governors and of the council

Sandra Leaton Gray on a chilling true story of the monetisation of the contents of academics’ heads

Universities denied extra places in favour of schools and SCITTs

University says there are ‘lessons to be learned’ from professor’s tribunal

Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones on the Persian king who has always been sidelined by Alexander the Great

Letter urges university staff to reject new pensions offer and renew strike action, despite warnings that success is unlikely

Some early career scholars feel there is not enough support for academics who reach out, say Richard Watermeyer and Jamie Lewis

Geoffrey Crossick, author of the report ‘Monographs and Open Access’, argues that the format is resilient but must embrace open access

A comparison of student-to-staff ratios and spending per student across Europe

‘Institution level’ designation granted to ifs University College in August makes it first to win the status since 2006

Jack Grove reports from Moscow on bold plans to revive the country’s ailing higher education sector