Kazakhstan’s knowledge economy is in a ‘delta moment’
Vice-provost for academic affairs at Nazarbayev University says the post-Soviet country is supporting higher education to break new ground in international research Â

Vice-provost for academic affairs at Nazarbayev University says the post-Soviet country is supporting higher education to break new ground in international research Â

Universities are rapidly expanding their student rolls, using their increased scale to invest, compete and insulate themselves against economic uncertainty. But at what cost, asks Ellie Bothwell

Brexit, domestic funding threats and declining public trust could conspire to undermine a critical national asset, says Louise Richardson

University of Canberra, QUT and UNSW Sydney the standout performers in a rising field

Institutions assume they will be bailed out if enrolments fall because they are ‘too big to fail’, says report

Baroness Amos leaves London institution after issuing warning about its finances

Podcast special from Taichung, Taiwan, following the 2017 Research Excellence Summit

Universities often claim to be competing in a global market, but their recruitment of leaders typically results in domestic appointments. With some of the world’s top institutions led by people from...

International students have long been central to American research, innovation and knowledge exchange. Yet today a combination of changing legislation, regulation and attitudes is excluding many and...

Data from ߣߣÊÓÆµ suggest some countries may be falling behind on the number of academics in non-STEM areas

The ranking will be released during the THE Asia Universities Summit in South Korea

Betting the farm on international students is a gamble – but what’s the alternative? asks THE’s Asia-Pacific editor John RossÂ

Relaxing international student regulations and increasing scholarships for Belt and Road countries are in lockstep with China's economic goals, says Abdur Rehman Cheema

The futurist on her gutsy mum, why technology should liberate not control, and how graduates are turning their backs on Silicon Valley

Rapidly growing country could be springboard to wider Asean engagement, say experts