Norwegian doctors sue state over training requirements
Norwegian Medical Association says failure to recognise Danish training breaches European Economic Area law

Norwegian Medical Association says failure to recognise Danish training breaches European Economic Area law

Cryptocurrencies will change the landscape of international finance. We can no longer think of money as a background phenomenon, says Richard Holden

Incumbent run close by King’s College London professor Ewan McGaughey in poll

Care needed to avoid scaring off doctoral students and burying officials in paperwork, senators hear

Rectors call for budget increases and wage rises for staff or institutions will soon be unable to function

Yale and Dartmouth moves to mandate SAT and ACT submissions have long-time opposition alliance getting testy about possible reversals across academia

Government considers whether number of entrants to universities in research-intensive grouping should still be a measure of school performance

To make maths programmes viable, we must make them more attractive to a wider pool of applicants, says Jens Marklof

Open peer review has ‘potential to be more thorough, inclusive and collegial’ than traditional journal-led route, funders and publishers say

In step with tech: Are universities switched on to digital health?

University of London institutions announce plans to restructure departments, affecting dozens of jobs

Oxford analysts see no evidence of bump in applications ahead of introduction of new restrictions last month

Universities UK chief executive says funding crisis facing English universities means it is not impossible that an institution will ‘shut its doors overnight’

Conference hears that the quality of degrees is at least as important as the quantity and the disciplines

The desire of bereaved parents to establish a statutory duty of care towards students is understandable – but for universities it remains a fraught issue