Turkey purge: EUA condemns move on university deans
Hundreds of deans have been ordered to resign while academics have been told not to travel abroad for work in the wake of the failed coup

Hundreds of deans have been ordered to resign while academics have been told not to travel abroad for work in the wake of the failed coup

In academia, and more widely, women are too easily relegated to the ‘less competent than men’ category, writes Dame Athene Donald

Unlike the rest of the EU budget, research funding disproportionately flows to rich members. But there are pressures for this to change

The ‘relatively modest’ research reputations of some senior US university leaders make their pay ‘grotesquely unmerited’, claims author of report

New education secretary praises moves to open up sector to new providers, but majority allowing bill to next stage is only 36

Having an unusual, foreign or difficult-to-say name can present challenges in UK academia, says Marta Natalia Wróblewska

Lord Stern's warning adds to concerns about a brain drain from British universities in the wake of the referendum result

Greater financial uncertainty caused by the EU referendum result should lead to a rethink of proposed reforms, says Labour

Sector experts debate whether continental outposts would help to mitigate any decline in student recruitment

Former universities minister calls for creation of academic council to advise ministers on decision making

Ahead of the HE and Research Bill's second reading, vice-chancellors Steve Smith and Edward Peck explain why they think reform is necessaryÂ

'Arguments premised on consumerism are not likely to influence me' insists academic after students suggest staff should not express personal opinions

The TEF will divide universities into 'institutional sheep and goats' and then starve the goats, writes Dorothy Bishop on the eve of the HE Bill's second reading