Rise of female leaders ‘opens up a sense of what’s achievable’
Sector’s progress in appointing women to top positions will help address remaining gender imbalances, but only with more work

Sector’s progress in appointing women to top positions will help address remaining gender imbalances, but only with more work

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

The Seattle University academic and novelist talks about satirising a type of male scholar who wins the plum posts, despite harming colleagues

Academics left ‘traumatised’ by ‘absurd’ and ‘Byzantine’ corporate booking systems that drain departmental travel funds

Grading fills students with anxiety and academics with guilt. It is the enemy of real education. Time for a rebellion, says Andy Farnell

Jeremy Hunt uses spring budget aiming to harness potential of R&D to boost economic growth

Union begins six days of action across UK universities after controversial decision to pause walkoutsÂ

Agents posing as students will look for a wide range of legal violations, with for-profit sector especially alarmed

Memorial University president apologises and takes paid break after questions on strength of her claims of indigenous ancestry

Postgraduate training likely to be concentrated in larger universities as EPSRC and Wellcome make cuts

Fluctuating foreign fee flows helped fuel ߣߣÊÓÆµn sector’s addiction to sessional staff

Analysis shows Swiss publisher MDPI set up almost 56,000 special issues with a closing date in 2023

Telling precariously employed literature scholars to just hang in there doesn’t cut it in a job market as bad as today’s, says Chris Townsend

Belated moves to mitigate precarity are welcome but may come too late for one scholar exhausted by insecurity