Australian university groups dispute 鈥榓cademic freedom鈥 definition
Proposed definition could provide get-out-of-jail-free card for 鈥榬ogue academics鈥, some claim

Proposed definition could provide get-out-of-jail-free card for 鈥榬ogue academics鈥, some claim

Silence of academics allowing politicians to abandon pledges to back Horizon Europe funding in crunch talks, observers warn

With a new show in the pipeline, academics have many suggestions for plot lines and pitfalls to avoid

A recent posting on聽bioRxiv may have been erroneous, but the mistakes were picked up within hours, notes Kristen Sadler

Helping Americans understand and value science is vital to nation鈥檚 continued supremacy, conference hears

The National Student Survey promotes higher education as a service passively consumed by students but it should encourage students to take more responsibility for their own learning, says Neil McBride

Working with actors in 鈥渓eft-behind鈥 communities and recognising expertise beyond their walls will help close knowledge gaps on economic divisions, say Siobhan Morris, Olivia Stevenson and John...

Analysis of lifetime returns of English undergraduate degrees finds wide variation across subjects

The Universities Superannuation Scheme is changing how it invests in ethical funds, which should be a concern to striking academics, argues Bernard H. Casey聽

Report into history of eugenics at UCL sets out series of measures to deal with contentious past, but some inquiry members claim it does not go far enough

鈥楩reedom of speech is a question of interpretation,鈥 says v-c who maintains art studio in Beijing

Australian senate order could put an end to deadline clashes plaguing research grant applicants

FBI allegedly pressured key witness to lie when discussing 鈥榙onations鈥 with implicated parents

Even those in maths and statistics misunderstood the method blamed for the reproducibility crisis, research in China finds

An atmosphere of fear on campuses has served to mute expression and limit academic freedom, but action can still be taken to fight back, says Debora Diniz