Censor sensibility
By restoring cuts made to Oscar Wilde's work, we gain insights into the political forces underpinning censorship, says Nicholas Frankel

By restoring cuts made to Oscar Wilde's work, we gain insights into the political forces underpinning censorship, says Nicholas Frankel
The table above lists the top 20 journals in anthropology by citation impact for the period 1 January 2001 to 28 February 2011. These journals range in focus from general to subfield-specific,...
JapanQuake costs universities billionsFour Japanese universities have estimated that the damage caused to them by the earthquake earlier this year will total ¥90 billion (£679 million). According to...
Academics claim that big corporate giver is allowed to vet professors, reports John Morgan
A newly released study suggests that the huge increase in Chinese research output is starting to be matched by a similar rise in the quality of its basic science.
LEVERHULME TRUSTResearch Project GrantsHumanities• Award winner: Simon Hillson• Institution: University College London• Value: £101,806Do larger molars and robust jaws in early hominins represent...

'Knee-jerk' reactions to minister's musings endanger sector, v-cs claim. Simon Baker writes
Going to university has become a "middle-class shibboleth" that reinforces social divisions and prevents the poor from accessing higher education to improve their life chances.To remedy the situation...
UCU to ballot over 'seriously disruptive action' as employers get their way. John Morgan reports
Journals are rightly seen as the "marketing arm of the pharmaceutical industry", according to the editor-in-chief of the British Medical Journal.
MPs find council out of touch with researchers, with science suffering as a result, writes Paul Jump
Post-election focus will be on management and funding gap with England. Hannah Fearn reports
A vice-chancellor is considering legal action against the UK Border Agency over the damage she said her university has suffered because of its "disproportionate" action.

Stuck in the 'valley of death'? There's always a place at Silicon Valley. Matthew Reisz reports
The role of academics as expert witnesses has come under scrutiny after an Australian politician called for a professor to be sacked over his role in a high-profile murder trial.