USS chief executive Bill Galvin to step down next year
Head of UK higher education’s biggest pension scheme to depart once successor is appointed

Head of UK higher education’s biggest pension scheme to depart once successor is appointed

Closure mirrored US government decision to suspend Fulbright programme to Afghanistan, which it subsequently reversed

Campus cites 2021 state law in telling all employees not to promote abortion, while state’s other large institution suggests pointing students to outside counsellors

New wave of funding schemes aims to counter ‘parachute research’ and brain drain

Government also set to introduce effective amnesty on doctoral plagiarism and loosen rules on candidates’ relatives from serving on hiring and promotion committees

University leavers becoming ‘more rational’ as country’s economy cools

Hitting targets ‘not the be-all and end-all’, John Blake tells THE, as national risk register for higher education participation planned

Victims of oppression often have to study informally; they should not be barred from pursuing an overseas master’s, say Natasha Robinson and David Mills

Minister’s title no longer includes ‘higher education’ and responsibilities no longer include ‘universities and higher education reform’

Bigger focus flagged on Indigenous knowledge, climate science and critical technologies

The University of Washington leader discusses bridging subject-level siloes, and how academic science can better serve society

SOAS director rails against ‘unjustly’ high mark-up on UK fees for overseas learners

Embracing the concept just as many other US campuses back away, top-ranked school school hopes for lawyers who pursue public service

Spin-off companies from Russell Group universities boast largest annual turnovers, data reveal

OIA says universities should apply regulations ‘with some flexibility’ as more learners forced to take on work or struggle to make ends meet