Domestic students ‘bring in more money than internationals’
New book challenges some of the ߣߣÊÓÆµn university sector’s holy cows

New book challenges some of the ߣߣÊÓÆµn university sector’s holy cows

Mandates the least worst option, as vice-chancellors await ‘the inevitable court cases’

The financial effects of Covid may cause disadvantaged college applicants to panic, unclear how to apply for aid or too ashamed to do so, says Amy Glynn

Tory ex-minister criticises ‘policy-Whitehall-Westminster establishment’ for failure to meet ‘high responsibility’ to plan for new universities

Emily Shuckburgh and Alyssa Gilbert, co-chairs of the COP26 Universities Network, draw the lessons from two years of collective effort

European research institutions want question of association to be separated from broader talks on political relationship

UK union says continuing face-to-face tuition puts staff and students in ‘unnecessary danger’

Ending in-person conferences during Covid tied to substantial gains in equity, sustainability and inclusiveness, US team finds in broad data analysis

New partnership with institutions in north-west should drive innovation and even recruitment

Deep cuts may be reversed, but the Brazilian president’s anti-science rhetoric will do lasting damage, says John Aubrey Douglass

Oxford reports 33Â per cent increase in Covid-19 cases in a week, with many of them the new variant

Canberra accepts advice of more than 10 reviews

Coyness, contention and competing agendas all hamper historians and sociologists of sex. Matthew Reisz speaks to those who choose, nevertheless, to probe this most sensitive and intimate of subjects

Reforms will seek to overcome barriers to collaboration between universities within bloc

System acknowledges inviting SAT and ACT results for course placement, as Berkeley analysis shows nationwide racial bias in post-admissions sorting