Gabrielle Petit: The Death and Life of a Female Spy in the First World War, by Sophie De Schaepdrijver
The memory of a Belgian heroine differed from the woman herself, Niamh Gallagher discovers

The memory of a Belgian heroine differed from the woman herself, Niamh Gallagher discovers

A remarkable investigation into the global traffic in cheap shelf-fillers uncovers both meanness and meaning in the market, says Louise Crewe

Paul Bernal clicks with a maverick thinker who shows how business and governments are building a global surveillance network and how we can fight back

Separating the past from philosophy is the key to understanding the period, learns Caroline Warman

Richard J. Williams on an entertaining study that takes in Las Vegas, Jerusalem and the online worlds of Second Life

Tom Palaima on an examination of the conflicts that have been raging since the 1960s

The number of people employed by social enterprises spun off from universities rose by almost 150 per cent between 2012-13 and 2013-14, figures reveal

A talented physicist who moved into finance and then returned to academia to create major programmes at Essex Business School has died

A research network that links schools with higher education institutions is demonstrating the positive impact the sector can have on teaching

How one academic stood up for fact in an error-strewn world
The UK’s universities indeed benefit from European research funding. But this funding is not dependent on membership of the European Union (“Universities UK to ramp up EU campaign”, 8 May).Norway,...

Twenty-five years after its publication, Camille Paglia’s Sexual Personae is still an energising ‘cultural bible’

GDP-adjusted ranking of global higher education systems puts British system near top

Survey details the financial and personal costs of casualisation in higher education

The former president of the National Union of Students explains how his background helped Labour take Ilford North from the Tories