UK universities at risk from ‘ill-informed’ immigration debate, warns Cambridge v-c
Sir Leszek Borysiewicz draws on his own background as the child of Polish immigrants to counter ‘negative’ rhetoric on immigration

Sir Leszek Borysiewicz draws on his own background as the child of Polish immigrants to counter ‘negative’ rhetoric on immigration

Senior lawyer criticises Counter Terrorism and Security Act

Complexity of government initiatives to help commercialise university research under scrutinyÂ

London Metropolitan University records biggest improvement in Hesa data

This week's issue discussed by the Times Higher Education team

Frolics abound in a tale of how the 1815 triumph hit the front pages, writes Sharon Wheeler

With Hungary accused of ‘undermining democratic values’, Malcolm Gillies considers to what extent universities with a liberal mission can flourish in ‘illiberal’ societies

Willy Maley on an ‘Eton of the East’ in Nigeria that inadvertently inspired a generation of writers

Alison Stokes on the literature that has tried to make complex explanations of the natural world accessible to laymen

Martin Cohen is unimpressed by an attempt to generalise about the philosophical inclinations of an entire nation

A collection of erudite essays examines the impact of the great tiger of English letters on other writers, learns Richard J. LarschanÂ

The advent of sound, of TV, of digital – the doomsayers have always pronounced on the demise of the flicks, Philip Kemp discovers

Niamh Gallagher on a body that, in chipping away at imperial rule, shaped the modern world

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Having entered Hollywood a wunderkind, Orson Welles could never escape his own myth or his self-destructive tendencies, says Philip Kemp