Scholar in row over Gaddafi ties is to leave LSE
An academic involved in the scandal over links between the Gaddafi regime and the London School of Economics is to leave the institution ahead of a report into the affair.

An academic involved in the scandal over links between the Gaddafi regime and the London School of Economics is to leave the institution ahead of a report into the affair.
Top researchers in biology have yet another publishing option following the launch of a major open-access journal by the Royal Society.

By Scott Jaschik, for Inside Higher Ed
Funding chiefs in England have told the government they have “concerns” about the timetable for implementing a new regulatory framework for higher education, warning the challenge of bringing in some...

Proposals have been published for the biggest shake-up in university admissions for 50 years.
A businessman and cross-bench peer has criticised government plans to dramatically reduce the number of student visas.
Employers have agreed to hold fresh talks with the University and College Union over the sector’s biggest pension fund, following the start of industrial action.
Two sixth-form students have launched legal action against what they claim is the government’s “unlawful” decision to treble the tuition fee cap to £9,000.
The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council has declined to mothball its controversial shaping capability policy but agreed to work more closely with learned societies on implementing it.

We're all in this together or we won't be in it at all: Jules Pretty on a call to arms for the planet's future

The life of a polymath with 'piercing sagacity' is delightfully rendered, finds Tim Birkhead
If society is a metaphorical building and income levels determine which floor people get to live on, then who inhabits the basement, who lives in the penthouse, who lives in between, and how much...
Joanna Bourke begins What it Means to be Human with a curious letter from "An Earnest Englishwoman" to The Times in 1872, enquiring whether women might be classified as animals. It transpired that...
A skewed comparison of opera's heavyweights results in a bloodless spectacle, notes Mark Berry
What is Madness? begins beautifully, echoing R.D. Laing's 1960 manifesto The Divided Self, with references to European (and especially French) thinkers that few of its readers may be familiar with,...