Talking leadership 7: Rianne Letschert on how academics are assessed
The Maastricht University president and rector is shifting the emphasis away from only research, despite pushback from Nobel laureate

The Maastricht University president and rector is shifting the emphasis away from only research, despite pushback from Nobel laureate

Privileging one set of subjects with a catchy acronym may once have served a purpose, but that has long since been outlived, says Andy MiahÂ

Unequal distribution may explain ‘inequality in scholarly outcomes’ and lead to some areas becoming ‘systematically understudied’

A look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

But experts warn there is little hope of progress while relations remain in ‘freezer’

Enlisting miscreants to help improve understanding of contract cheating, as part of their punishment, could be a way forward, says Kholah Yaruq Malik

World’s biggest digital library of Chinese journals under pressure over copyright infringement

Julie Lydon and Sarah Springman recognised alongside vice-chancellors, UUK chief executive and former UCU leader

Cypriot university to launch degree focusing on Zuckerberg-backed virtual worlds

UK higher education is in robust shape, but it must be willing to build multiple bridges in 2022, says David Bell

Reopening of international study opportunities looms large as Covid-19 continues to dominate news agenda

Nathan Abrams is impressed by a comprehensive attempt to survey the ways Nazi atrocities have been represented on screen

Ontario parliament demands documents over university’s unprecedented bankruptcy, though analysis may turn to realities of bankrolling remote communities

Despite the pandemic, trade disputes and geopolitical tensions, several factors will continue to push and pull Chinese students abroad, says Nicolas Chu

Government move brings meaning to the motto ‘Scholars for a Year, Cheveners for Life’, says advocate