Last Resort: the Financial Crisis and the Future of Bailouts, by Eric A. Posner
It’s time to make honest women out of the bodies that rescued the banks, argues Sir Howard Davies

It’s time to make honest women out of the bodies that rescued the banks, argues Sir Howard Davies

The author of Invisible Agents: Women and Espionage in Seventeenth-Century Britain on unreliable narrators and spymistresses

Some commentators have urged the UK to replicate German universities of applied science. It’s not that simple, says Neil Shirtcliffe

UK students may be less likely to commit suicide than the general population, but rates are rising. A properly informed and funded response is vital, says Sarah NiblockÂ

Book of the week: An erudite biography of Christopher Columbus’ illegitimate son impresses Alexander Samson

This defence of quantum physics replaces one problem with another, writes Cait MacPhee

A one-sided account of a conflict between an eminent professor and an Oscar-winning film-maker is both upbeat and challenging, finds Howard Segal

Is the 4* researcher who is also a stellar teacher a realistic expectation? ߣߣÊÓÆµ surveyed academics to find out. Jack Grove reports

A discussion about how universities around the world are turning to bonds markets to raise money

Creating a digital learning environment isn’t just about convenience for students, it’s about preparing them for the future, says Renee PattonÂ

Overseas students seen as key buffer against rankings drop and demographic decline

Home Office says records on international academics are ‘not collated in a manner which can be reported on’

‘Verbose’ language, bad English and unexplained abbreviations all figure highly in reasons for rejection

Reformed Paris university raising funds for professorships, labs, bursaries and restoration projects

Hungarian Academy of Sciences will ‘continue negotiations’ after government bid to take charge of research financing