The great escape: boltholes for academics fleeing Brexit and Trump
From Australia to Singapore, David Matthews and John Elmes weigh the pros and cons of likely destinations

From Australia to Singapore, David Matthews and John Elmes weigh the pros and cons of likely destinations

Constantine Sandis considers a cool look at how our biases may render altruistic acts less effective

The inventor of the fuel cell deserves a biography, but more detail of his work and his life would be welcome, says Richard Joyner

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Book of the week: A history of famous liberals shows how global conflict shaped them and us, writes A. W. Purdue

Liz Morrish reflects on why she chose to tackle the failings of the neoliberal academy from the outside

Since the Brexit vote, UK institutions have been losing friends and influence around the world. That will continue unless they win political support

A round-up ofĀ academics awarded research council funding

The official weekly newsletter of the University of Poppleton.Ā Finem respice!
The UK government has announced plans to alter the Higher Education and Research Bill to allow the creation of two-year āfast-trackā degrees (for which institutions could charge higher tuition fees...
In the article āYoung academicsā research āelegant but not interestingā ā (News, 23 February), Richard Robison, discussing the increasing āconservatismā of young scholarsā papers, says: āIronically,...
In āThe gift of tonguesā (Features, 23 February), Jacqueline Dutton rightly observes: āModern languages will survive if academics continue to work together to support each other across languages and...
With the triennial valuation of the Universities Superannuation Scheme due in March, we are concerned about the self-inflicted harm caused by a flawed measure introduced by the trustee to manage risk...