Talking leadership: Kerstin Mey on using arts to reimagine education
University of Limerick president talks about putting in place university-wide structural changes to inspire cross-pollination between disciplines

University of Limerick president talks about putting in place university-wide structural changes to inspire cross-pollination between disciplines

Action against RMIT service comes as institutions support ‘yes’ vote in forthcoming Australian referendum

Litigation over lockdown-affected degrees has highlighted how unfair contracts favouring universities offer scant consumer protection to students, say David Palfreyman and Dennis Farrington

As high-profile event to deliver ‘major support’ fades, scientists already desperate for funding explode in disgust

Scholars lament loss of ‘critical’ resource in Nordics at a time when knowledge of Asia is ‘increasingly important’

As majority of Ivy League transitions after Covid, social psychologist leaves his decade-long tenure with financial strength and labour challenges

Things go from bad to worse for student-starved sector, with unexpended funds recycled one month and repossessed the next

Revised freedom of speech guidelines are pushing universities to be both more active in heading off problems before they start, but also less political

Burden of proof: Can the REF really measure research environment quality?

Start-of-year outage affects 120,000 students, faculty and staff at major US institution with top cybersecurity programme

University managers’ doomed pursuit of unattainable ideals turns staff into martyrs who see work as sacrifice and suffering. It explains much about why so many feel stressed, harassed and miserable,...

Molecular ecologist on moving around, moving genes around, how she juggles four concurrent positions and the importance of thinking before you act

Anger over ‘double-taxing’ of foreign researchers thanks to £1,000-plus levy is causing scientific talent to explore job opportunities outside the UK, warn scientists

Hepi author warns of ‘dangerous’ pressure to reduce leaders’ salaries in reaction to attention from the media and politicians

Those with passionate convictions must be willing to concede their arguments may be flawed or even wrong if useful debate is to happen on campus, says UCL president Michael Spence