Richmond becomes first university to offer UK and US degrees
Private liberal arts institution gains UK degree-awarding powers

Private liberal arts institution gains UK degree-awarding powers

Latest Hesa data show there was no immediate exodus of academics but Russell Group warns against ‘complacency’

Nearly two decades on, reports suggest the goal of a unified higher education area in Europe is still some distance away

If England’s post-18 education funding review is going to be useful, we must begin by taking an accurate view of the costs and benefits of higher education, says Mike BoxallÂ

Albert Schram may not return to Pacific nation to defend claims that he faked his PhD

Five Star Movement offers ‘detailed’ policies on HE, but has been attacked as anti-science

International educators, all too aware of the consequences of xenophobic attitudes, will continue to boldly advocate the values of global learning, says Esther Brimmer

International recruitment set to rise in Australia as visa applications rebound

Novelists write short stories for Spanish university’s criminology degree

University expertise gives decision-makers breathing space, says former foreign secretary

The autonomy, professional discretion and judgement once central to academic life is now looked on with deep scepticism by university managers, argues Peter Fleming

Seventy-seven day walkout has failed to address key issues of dispute over pay and benefits

University systems are born from unique historical and social traditions but can be categorised under three coherent models, according to Samuel MartÃn-Barbero and Adrian Monck