A Lab of One’s Own: Science and Suffrage in the First World War, by Patricia Fara
More heroic hidden figures are saluted in a timely study reflecting on equality today, says June Purvis

More heroic hidden figures are saluted in a timely study reflecting on equality today, says June Purvis

The messages of this edited collection are bold but are the contributors the silenced minority, asks Rachel Pain

People link upright bearing with positive traits and slouch with sloth – and worse, Louisa Yates finds

Helena Goodwyn wishes for more novel arguments in this prescription to remedy people’s literary lacunae

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media

Research fellowship will explore how the US civil rights leader’s work could improve relations between academics and administrators

The Republic of Ireland’s embrace of differentiated national missions for institutions offers international lessons, says Ellen Hazelkorn

Social scientists’ scepticism about research oversight also relates to the curiously bad press it gets in Western literature, writes Katarzyna KaczmarskaÂ

To survive, UK universities must think far beyond educational products and their own narrow institutional interests, says Mike Boxall

Universities must become more accessible and engaged if they are to thrive in the technological future, says Feridun Hamdullahpur

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Prisoners rarely get tertiary lessons, let alone have undergraduates study alongside them, but the results can be profound. Helen Lock reports

Writers’ relationships with their mothers; doctors are people too; Hilter’s passion for celluloid; a journey through mental illness; and the birth of the world’s first independent air force

Book of the week: Anti-populists need to look in the mirror instead of fixating on political rivals, says Matthew Goodwin