LSE’s financial woes spotlight wider issues for sector
The London School of Economics will take a massive hit from loss of international students, highlighting how reliant some institutions have become on their revenue

The London School of Economics will take a massive hit from loss of international students, highlighting how reliant some institutions have become on their revenue

Past advisories have not quenched Chinese students’ thirst for overseas study

Universities’ divestment policies are undermined by the USS’ continued investment in oil companies, says Bill SpenceÂ

Members of the Imperial College Covid-19 Response Team warn against redundancies in ‘vital’ jobs

Ministry of Education’s advice follows spike in ‘discriminatory incidents’ during pandemic

Universities pledge that women will not be disproportionately affected by the Covid-19 wrecking ball

ߣߣÊÓÆµn university directs academics to spend up to 80 per cent of their time teaching, despite relatively healthy financial position

Posts on social media aren’t enough to dismantle institutional and structural racism in the academy, say Marcia A. Wilson and Lurraine Jones

Remote delivery seen as a continuing necessity as long as students are stranded overseas

The areas hit earliest by the coronavirus are reopening, but with protections in place

Even students on remote atolls face familiar problems around inequitable access to the internet and family support, says Geoff Goodman

Failure to improve predictions compounds concerns over effectiveness, accuracy and racial bias

Tests are back in some regions but not others, as international education braces for a staggered start

The historian and author of The Politics of Humiliation discusses fairy tales and myths, the history of emotions, and the relationships between victim, perpetrators and onlookers

ߣߣÊÓÆµ takes a closer look at Chinese subjects based on a similar methodology for the World University Rankings, Duncan Ross says