23 July 2020 digital edition
Wrecking ball: Could the coronavirus destroy the student housing market?

Wrecking ball: Could the coronavirus destroy the student housing market?

Just because you can’t meet in person, it doesn’t mean you can’t network, say a number of academic experts

Nick Hillman assesses the arguments for and against banning certain speakers from campuses

UNSW degree, thought to be first of its kind in world, aims to stay ahead of quantum engineering curve and meet surging global demand for skills

Does size matter? Apparently not, according to the students and faculty at the world’s outstanding small universities

Hepi report says universities need to move past the idea that decolonisation is merely an equality and diversity issue

Tributes paid to sociologist whose ‘influential work’ on inequalities has proved crucial in understanding and addressing today’s sharp ‘social divisions’

The politician and barrister tells Anna McKie about human rights misconceptions, and the surprising connections between law and politics

Physical events are not going away but they must open up and embrace the best of the digital world, says Jim Woodgett

If policymakers are worried about the cost of degrees, why aren’t living expenses taken into account?

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

The recent lockdowns highlighted the strains in student housing provision in several countries. As students puzzle over why their universities have so little power to extract refunds from private...

Plan S shift backed by European Commission will be ‘detrimental’ to researchers, says commission-created ERC