Radical treatment? Not radical enough
UCL professor says life sciences strategy doesn't have 'big enough vision'. John Morgan reports
UCL professor says life sciences strategy doesn't have 'big enough vision'. John Morgan reports
Plaudits for Framework Programme's simplified and increased funding provision. Paul Jump reports
The chair of the University of Sussex's council has issued a staunch defence of courses derided as "Mickey Mouse" degrees.
Research fundingDon't 'micromanage', says NurseFunders should avoid "micromanaging" research and requiring applicants to set out the impact of their proposals, according to the president of the Royal...
Scholar highlights flawed metadata in the world's largest digital library. Matthew Reisz writes
The 'core-and-margin' policy will cost colleges dear - another unforeseen result of coalition plans, says Philip Davies
Wes Streeting argues that a truly independent watchdog would back upfront cash for low-income students, not 'fee waivers' for the state
Soul-crushing email causes stress and slows work. Oliver Double proposes some ways to cut the burden. Email-free Friday, anyone?
A reductive approach to social behaviour is bad news for democracy, James Garvey writes
The tale of modern psychiatry's founder dominates this story of changing diagnoses, David Healy finds
In the course of my research on 19th-century politics of prostitution, I was shocked to learn in detail about the miserable lives of prostitutes who served the soldiers of the British Army in India....
The Poet's Freedom is an ambitious book that ranges widely through Western philosophy and literature, making liberal mention of Plato, Aristotle, 糖心Vlogr, Kant, Coleridge, Marx and Hegel, and quoting...
A pessimist's insights point to the future woes of the market-driven academy, Professor Y finds
Renaissance writers knew the seductive power of swerving. John Milton, in The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates (1649), sensed the English people baulking at the killing of the king: "Another sort......
The internet has revolutionised humanities research. But has the development of ever-more sophisticated online resources freed up scholars to explore new ideas, or made them slaves to the digital...