Books interview: Hugh Pennington
Scary puddings, the art of succinctness and First World War myth-making: perspectives from the author of Have Bacteria Won?

Scary puddings, the art of succinctness and First World War myth-making: perspectives from the author of Have Bacteria Won?

A Guilted Age: Apologies for the Past, by Ashraf H. A. Rushdy

Cait MacPhee on personal accounts of gender trouble in the sciences

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Book of the week: Brace yourself for unusual keepsakes in a study of our attachment to corpses, says Deborah Lutz

John Elmes talks to Paul Jackson about the politics scholar’s central role during negotiations between the Nepalese government and Maoist rebels

Higher education expert who died in February asks in paper what might replace strengths of the polytechnic system

A shocking film about the extent of sexual assault at US colleges has just toured UK universities. It is high time we took this problem seriously in Britain, says Nicole Westmarland, while US...

Higher education Green Paper says director of fair access to higher education could be given power to set entry goals for universities

Student opportunity cuts could worsen part-time crisis, warns Open University v-c, while research concerns focus on ring-fence and ‘tucking in’

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the national press

A round-up of recent recipients of research council cash