Female scholars ‘less successful’ at negotiating job offers
Women are less effective at bargaining monetary benefits but have more success when they feel supported by professors, says study

Women are less effective at bargaining monetary benefits but have more success when they feel supported by professors, says study

Like the explorers who set out across the unsettled United States, scientists need a similar pioneering and resilient spirit, says Daniel Bojar

Italian medic Fabio Quondamatteo says EU referendum result is behind ‘difficult and painful’ decision to leave for Ireland

Poorly designed outreach schemes, privacy restrictions and standoffish companies combining to waste resource

Research also finds that branch campus graduates earn more than their peers who studied in the West

Jonathan Mirsky is fascinated by a book that calls into question some of the unexamined received wisdom about China under Mao

Sarah Kinkel is very impressed by a detailed account of how navigators learned their skills

Matthew Reisz is intrigued by a gentle stroll through the byways of the periodic table

Students had called for royal to quit over friendship with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein

David Lehmann assesses a journalistic account of clerical abuse in Central America

Lennard Davis is intrigued by an exceptionally wide-ranging account of the many things on which humans get high

The forcible removal of a visually impaired student should be met with institutional change for one of Britain’s oldest students’ societies, argues Henry HatwellÂ

Manifesto also pledges ‘fundamental rethink’ of teaching and research assessment, plus end to ‘failed free market’ in higher education and to staff casualisation

In a marketised system, student numbers are rising. Small universities offer a collegial approach and, for some, better, not bigger, is the key to excellence

Ann Hughes applauds a compelling analysis of the ways that Tudor England was open to the world