Beware ‘Streisand effect’ on contract cheating, UK’s QAA hears
Hollywood legend’s backfiring legal action offers lessons for universities on essay mills, says researcher

Hollywood legend’s backfiring legal action offers lessons for universities on essay mills, says researcher

ߣߣÊÓÆµn schools to run short of teachers as funding cuts and ‘bad media’ bite into education enrolments

Professor of government rose from poverty in childhood to become leading expert on British public policy

The Wolfson History Prize-nominated professor discusses how China’s past shapes its nationalism and why the Communist Party’s ‘historical nihilist’ label suits him

Study reveals feedback on social media sites closely correlate to measures of quality such as England's TEF

François Ortalo-Magné says executive programmes help students ‘look at the world differently’

Better recognition of the wider social benefits of both teaching and research would help universities regain public goodwill, says Nick PetfordÂ

If microcredentials could only gain the trust of employers and workers, platforms would have a golden goose on their hands, says Chris Fellingham

Thirty years on from the start of the push to get more girls into science, the sense of urgency and commitment is waning, says Karen Russ

Magdeburg university head reveals scale of threats he received after controversy over right-wing AfD speakers

Joe Moran enters another dimension, one marked by the absence of sound. Next stop, the quiet zone

A lyrical memoir of a writer and psychoanalyst’s romantic and intellectual relationship with Lacan shows that psychoanalysis is very much the art of the enigmatic vignette, says Benjamin Poore

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Universities cannot become Gardens of Eden without losing their key purpose, writes Hanna Holborn Gray

Abigail Williams enjoys this demonstration of the many ways in which publications make meaning