Hang on for a bumpy 2009 - the year of living dangerously
What do key players in higher education predict for the coming months? Most find cause for optimism amid the gloom
What do key players in higher education predict for the coming months? Most find cause for optimism amid the gloom
ENGINEERING AND PHYSICAL SCIENCES RESEARCH COUNCILThe EPSRC has announced more than £21 million in funding under its "Challenging Engineering" initiative, which aims to encourage engineering...
Drawing on four decades in computing, Sir Timothy O'Shea is intent on ensuring that Jisc keeps serving the whole sector
A professor of international law at the University of Leeds has been appointed to a key nature-conservation post in his native Nepal. Surya Subedi has been named a governor of the National Trust for...
A Sheffield professor's fairground past helps her draw crowds to her research, writes Olga Wojtas
It is not only academics who are snapped up by rival employers, but Jon Baldwin says strong organisations survive
Jonathan Adams says that even close scrutiny of the intriguing 2008 data gives no firm answers about who's better and who's best
Gary Day on the Time Lord's festive caper, Wallace and Gromit's latest escapade and the Nativity
Data provided by Thomson Reuters from its Essential Science Indicators database, 1 January 1998-31 August 2008
Knights BachelorTimothy Robert Peter Brighouse. For services to education. (Oxford, Oxfordshire)David Nicholas Cannadine. Formerly Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother professor, Institute of Historical...

The UK's only private university is led by an outspoken iconoclast, does not take part in the RAE and is home to 'internal exiles', mavericks and unabashed traditionalists. Matthew Reisz reports
Employers have discovered that a mind sharpened by the study of philosophy is ideal for today's workplace, writes Hannah Fearn
Ray J. Paul, a member of two subpanels in RAE 2008, says funding should be less elitist than it was in 2001 but argues that the use of peer review needs careful consideration if it is to be used in...
By Diane Gilhooley