Australiaās university funding reforms āstuck in limboā
Senate adjourns before voting on higher education bill, meaning students have to apply without knowing what fees will be

Senate adjourns before voting on higher education bill, meaning students have to apply without knowing what fees will be

Chris Parr picks through some of the highlights from the tuition fees debate between David Willetts and Andrew Adonis

Higher education institutions in Turkey and Belgium report decline in staff and student exchanges following attacks

Dishonest to claim that internationalisation is for the common good when it reaches so few people, consultant says

Higher education institutions are partly to blame for the hostility they now face, says US vice-provost

Lord Willetts and Lord Adonis go head to head in this video debate, tackling UK political issues from tuition fees to vice-chancellor pay levels

Unions should be seen as investments in teaching and research quality rather than cost-saving exercises, advises EUA governance specialist

Quality assurance professionals call for system to verify refugeesā education credentials before ānext crisisā

Holly Else considers how the withdrawal of one of the biggest players in European research could change science on the Continent, and likely national winners and losers
There is one clear lesson from the review of the teaching excellence framework and the concerns about grade inflation, and it represents a massive slap in the face to all those who have placed...
Jedidiah Evans (āWrung out and tossed outā, Opinion, 7 September) rightly alerts readers to the systemic issues of casual and part-time academic employment, issues that are not confined to Australia...

Berkeley scholar of the Renaissance remembered

THEĀ pay data since 2010-11 show pay of UK leaders is going up faster than that of rank-and-file academics, but the reasons are less clear

The Warburg professor discusses folk practice, emptying Milwaukeeās bins, and bargain cinema tickets

If we are going to build societies of peace and consensus, we have to accept each otherās villains as elements of our common past, saysĀ Felipe FernĆ”ndez-Armesto