Rise of the Rocket Girls: The Women Who Propelled Us, From Missiles to the Moon to Mars, by Nathalia Holt
Book of the week: Meet the human computers in heels who juggled science and family, says Margaret A. Weitekamp

Book of the week: Meet the human computers in heels who juggled science and family, says Margaret A. Weitekamp

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

An economist explains to the rich that they didn’t build that, Danny Dorling writes

David Gewanter on a poet’s turning his telltale gaze to works of verse and makers of muddled readings and purveyors of ‘balonium’

Projecting their hopes and fears on to Israel has polarised Jews in the US, says William Kolbrener

Janet Sayers on what inner speech can tell us about our brain processes

Timely titles for consideration take in upright citizens, fly-by-wire ethics, a world of troubling numbers and home round the range

The grouping of subjects such as neuroscience and psychiatry with cheaper disciplines will lead to what critics say is a failure to fairly fund mental health research

Six months after the PhD student’s murder in Egypt, John Elmes looks at the case and talks to those who were close to the promising young scholar

Do universities need to rethink what they do and how they do it now that artificial intelligence is beginning to take over graduate-level roles?

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media

Idea is mooted at EuroScience Open Forum but event is also warned that privileging researchers could be seen as ‘elitist’

Jo Beall assesses how recent changes to higher education and research compare with countries the UK could see as key trading partners post-Brexit

Former education secretary under Thatcher considers how his new work on book burning relates to current debate on censorship