Alaska president seeks cuts ‘glide path’, not ‘crash landing’
While fighting huge state funding cut, James Johnsen concedes overcapacity and low interest

While fighting huge state funding cut, James Johnsen concedes overcapacity and low interest

Wolfgang Ketterle says scientists should aim instead for equilibrium in the longer term, and always keep other interests or hobbies

Founder of Ligo project reveals some researchers have left over a lack of recognition, exposing wider attribution difficulties for large teams

David Matthews asks if elevating individuals to near-deity status undermines modern science’s purpose of deposing authority figures such as priests and popes

Independent review finds college's actions breached data protection law, as well as going against its own values

Our weekly glance over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

OfS rules that Bloomsbury Institute Limited cannot be included on register of providers because of quality and governance concerns

Lucy Bolton reflects on the links between the action on screen and real life in American independent cinema

Tom McLeish delves into the complex relations between scientific and poetic creativity

Sharon Wheeler celebrates the core journalistic skills that changing technology are unlikely to render obsolete

Commies, wizards, women…Alice Gorman is delighted by an account that overturns most of what we thought we knew about the early US space effort

We’ve added bold metrics, improved methodology and widened our coverage, Phil Baty writes

Encouraging good relationships between faculty and students, and creating diverse, international classrooms are priorities in Europe, finds Ellie Bothwell

The move towards internationalisation varies across the continent, finds Simon Baker

New measures are helping us to better understand the experiences of students studying abroad and expand our global view, Duncan Ross writes