United States
Students report being pressured into non-consensual sex
Almost 10 per cent of female and 4 per cent of male undergraduates say they have 鈥渂een pressured or forced into sexual contact without their consent鈥 during their four years at university, according to a survey of more than 500,000 students at 400 institutions in the US. The report , by sexual assault prevention training company EverFi, says that universities should 鈥渄evelop focused approaches to address their specific campus needs鈥 relating to issues of sexual assault.
Poland
Overhaul for research evaluation
Plans for a new system to evaluate research have been announced by Poland鈥檚 minister of science and higher education. Its key objectives, Lena Kolarska-Bobi艅ska explained, were to boost the 鈥渋nternationalisation of Polish universities and Polish science鈥 and to take advantage of European funding initiatives 鈥 鈥渘ot just to spend the money, but also to adjust our science and our thinking to new goals鈥. It is hoped that the reforms will foster more interdisciplinary research and more collaborations with industry, as well as facilitate work in new fields.
Turkey
Leftists suffer wrongful imprisonment, politician claims
Hundreds of left-wing students in Turkey have been wrongly jailed over charges of having links to terrorist groups, a leading politician has claimed. Veli A臒baba, deputy chair of the main opposition Republican People鈥檚 Party (CHP), told a press conference on 30 January that more than 3,000 students are in prison, many of them on the basis of what he called spurious evidence of membership of a terrorist organisation. Students have also been imprisoned for reading Karl Marx, joining sit-ins in support of those whose relatives have disappeared and calling for democracy and freedom in universities, Mr A臒baba said.
Guyana
Lockdown protest
About 30 members of a student society chained the main entrance of the University of Guyana鈥檚 Turkeyen campus on 21 February in a protest aimed at forcing a resumption of classes, which have been suspended since staff began a strike in late January. Academic and support staff began a sit-in on 26 January to press their demands for a 60 per cent increase in wages. Negotiations between university staff and management have since collapsed, although some lecturers have been taking classes, according to local media reports.
India
Sen to leave university post over political interference
Nobel laureate Amartya Sen has raised concerns about academic freedom in India after announcing that he will not seek a second term as a university chancellor because Narendra Modi鈥檚 government has 鈥渄ecided not to have me鈥. The economist and philosopher, who is chancellor of Nalanda University, told The Times of India that winning an election 鈥渄oes not give you permission to undermine the autonomy of academic institutions鈥. Professor Sen accused the government of using its powers over Nalanda as a 鈥減olitical weapon鈥 because it was hostile to him.
Australia
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Universities should pay an escalating level of tax, or 鈥渟ubsidy鈥, on tuition fee rises above current price caps if Australia鈥檚 ceiling is lifted, the architect of income-contingent loans has suggested. The remarks by Australian National University economist Bruce Chapman come amid political deadlock over the government鈥檚 plans to abolish caps. In a policy with echoes of the Browne Review in England, Professor Chapman moots levies of up to 80 per cent on fee increases of more than A$10,000 (拢5,057) above the current variable cap. The government is said to be considering the idea.
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