LSBU writes off £16 million ‘bad debt’, including overseas fees
Bad debt provision pushes London university into deficit and affects banking covenant

Bad debt provision pushes London university into deficit and affects banking covenant

Required remedies include harsher punishments, more flexible research design stipulations and stronger social sanctions, says Akhil Bhardwaj

A world of space: Can international students save Korea’s universities?

Report authors warn focus on sciences risks making UK research sector ‘lopsided’

President of Lincoln University in Missouri voluntarily agrees to take paid administrative leave following death of Antoinette Candia-Bailey

Campuses in urban areas of Ontario, British Columbia and Nova Scotia may be first to face federal cap on education visas

After years of warnings, a dip in international enrolments risks tipping universities into crisis. It is deeply strange that government seems not to care

While UK universities are starting to address the challenges faced by new mothers, combining parenthood and academia remains a difficult task. Five writers give their experience of what institutions...

Research quality more evenly spread than funding and ‘toxic cultural bias’ could be behind disparities, says geographical analysis for Hepi

Almost no leaders in THE survey expect government to support a university in serious trouble, as domestic and international funding woes leave one v-c fearing ministers ‘want to drive us out of...

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

Good for the goose but not the gander, after college’s university-standard performance failed to earn it sub-university branding

University courses franchised to colleges accounted for 53 per cent of £4.1 million of fraud detected by SLC last year, says public spending watchdog

Analysis of Ucas figures reveals which universities saw the largest falls in undergraduate recruitment

The British Library cyber-attack underlines that HE and research libraries’ technologies and policies put us at too much risk, says Fiona Greig