3 July 2014
Life after life - When scholars pass the baton of their papers and unfinished works

Life after life - When scholars pass the baton of their papers and unfinished works

Warwick sociologist urges scholars to let go of their āsense of injuryā if they want to resist marketisation

UK parent institutions face questions over their procedures and monitoring of capital operations

Hefce-commissioned report recommends adjusting questions to counter fears that survey is being filled in āwithout sufficient thoughtā

New workstreams, fewer events and push to attract subscribers could help organisation to achieve self-sufficiency, chief says

Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman on a shrewd analysis of the global order

Leeds v-c and former Hefce head Sir Alan Langlands āworriedā by George Osborneās comments on science in the North

Paper reveals that university principals worry more about a common research area than English āfee refugeesā
As an Englishman living in Scotland who has spent half his life in England and half in Scotland, I will be voting for independence on 18Ā September.I intend to vote this way not for nationalist...

Seven men rule the Middle Kingdom, but why them? Jonathan Mirsky on a study of Party potentates

Foreign students in the UK need fluency, not just a certificate, says Karen Harris

Dorothy Bishop on the senseless purge at the Institute of Psychiatry

A $1 billion buyout of a UK biotech firm netted founder David S. Latchman just $709. He offers advice on seeking investors

What happens to scholarsā papers and unfinished works when they die? Matthew Reisz on the guardianās dilemma

The vice-chancellor of Plymouth University has been āplaced on leaveā by the institutionās board of governors.