Still second among equals
Academe could become a largely 'female' profession by 2020. But although women are taking over at lower levels, they continue to struggle to break into top jobs. Is this due to persistent bias or are...

Academe could become a largely 'female' profession by 2020. But although women are taking over at lower levels, they continue to struggle to break into top jobs. Is this due to persistent bias or are...
Most people enter academe to delve into a subject, not to manage. To improve personnel administration, universities have beefed up HR departments with staff and strategies from outside campus. Hannah...
Sari Nusseibeh was Arafat's man in Jerusalem and spent time in jail accused of spying for Saddam, but the philosopher and advocate of non-violence sees himself primarily as an educator, he tells...

Is it a patriarchal conspiracy or is it just me? - The gender gap in British universities
Thomas Huxley, Charles Darwin’s great defender, epitomises our image of the new public face of Victorian science. A self-made professional, researching and politicking furiously, Huxley wrote...
Data from Thomson Scientific’s Essential Science Indicators, 1 January 1997–31 October 2007

Universities will have to ‘seize new markets’ to remain competitive. Rebecca Attwood reports
Wikipedia reveals not the ‘wisdom of the crowds’ but the rule of the mob, argues Tara Brabazon
Roy Harris is bemused by a dense, ill-tempered screed on the English language as oppressor
This week’s competition, in which you have to identify a book from its opening sentence, is from a satire on nineteenth-century French society:“The little town of Verrières could pass for one of the...
David-Antoine Williams on a poet's restless mind
George Gissing: A Life by Paul Delany, professor in the department of English, Simon Fraser University. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, £25.00, ISBN 9780297852124."George Gissing believed that the twin...

What are shadows? Can we literally see them? Can we only see them, or can we also feel them? Do they have colours? If so, can they have chromatic colours, or are they only ever black or grey? How do...
Critics of US foreign policy may live to regret finger-wagging from the sidelines, argues Paul Cornish