Tangled in a web of regulation on the net
The Times Higher examines how some countries restrict freedom on the internet Academics in most countries take the web and unfettered e-mail access for granted. They exchange ideas and information,...
The Times Higher examines how some countries restrict freedom on the internet Academics in most countries take the web and unfettered e-mail access for granted. They exchange ideas and information,...
The Times Higher examines how some countries restrict freedom on the internet Academics and students in China are facing increasingly sophisticated attempts to rein in the web. Rules brought into...
The Times Higher examines how some countries restrict freedom on the internet Zimbabwean academics and students have been affected by, but not specifically targeted for, internet and e-mail...
The Times Higher examines how some countries restrict freedom on the internet E-mail and mobile phones played vital roles in the Rose and Orange revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine, but the Government...
The council that represents Australian universities is on the brink of breaking up, with the eight research-intensive universities calling for radical changes in the way it operates. The Australian...
As consultations on the European Research Council conclude, universities in its 25 member states see it and the Seventh Framework Programme for research as new opportunities. Jerzy Buzek, former...
The entrance exam for US graduate schools is being revamped and expanded after widespread cheating. Some 500,000 people a year take the Graduate Record Exam in 180 countries. The test will change in...
The pursuit of knowledge and freedom of speech are being undermined by campus activists, writes Daphne Patai Nothing is as destructive to higher education as threats from within - threats that derive...
Architects, in thinking of themselves as artists, too often seem to overlook the role people play in their grand designs I had a "Sebastian" moment this summer. It felt just like that scene in...
So David Secher, Cambridge University's research director, has been appointed chief executive of N8 - the partnership of research-intensive northern universities that aims to seriously ruffle the...
There were reports of serious unrest among the governing council of University College London this week. Another row over the college's rebranding? A debate about the future of the federal University...
A veil of secrecy has descended, it seems, over the art adorning the walls of Bristol University. The Times Higher asked all universities for information about their art collections for a feature in...
A pointed Parliamentary question from David Cameron, the Tory leadership hopeful and shadow education secretary, appears to have backfired. He asked when was it decided that August 1, 2005 should be...
Lord Horatio Nelson, who died defeating the Napoleonic fleets at the Battle of Trafalgar on October 21, 1805, had an elaborate funeral at St Paul's Cathedral. It was the first state ceremony for...
The other day, a balding thirtysomething academic sat on a bench in central London reading a fictitious newspaper. Despite the cold, he read the same pages - which contained nothing but gibberish -...