ߣߣÊÓÆµn open access push goes from green to gold
While progress has been hamstrung by lack of scale or regulatory force, advocates say the time has come

While progress has been hamstrung by lack of scale or regulatory force, advocates say the time has come

The author of Treasured: How Tutankhamun Shaped a Century on finding girls and women in history, archaeology’s ‘heroic’ age and the cultural impact of ‘Egyptomania’

While Canberra’s decision is ‘great news’, students still face competition for flights and a mishmash of state rules

 ¥30 million fund a start towards bridging the divide between sectors, researchers say

Greater cross-border collaboration key to peace and prosperity, says learned society

Letter from 22 academics warns of ‘life-threatening circumstances’

Study finds that post-war baby boom probably led to scores of women being lost to American scienceÂ

Both industry and academia in New Zealand need people who can look past traditional subject boundaries, says Catherine Whitby

Breadth of study and ‘authentic learning communities’ can transform many different dimensions of graduates’ lives

Inviting people to share their full selves on campus promotes mental health, diversity and intellectual stimulation, says Kyle Sebastian Vitale

Major science organisation targets periodicals publishing too many papers or high proportion of brief articles

Research that is neither rigorous nor insightful serves no one, say Stefan Stremersch, Nuno Camacho and Russell Winer

Year of collective assessment after Floyd killing leaves nation’s top universities promising firm diversity goals with publicly measurable outcomes

Research at undergraduate level engages students and helps keep the academic pipeline flowing

Massive cuts to GCRF-funded research hubs will not continue next year after they won praise from a Whitehall review, UK Research and Innovation confirms