Denmark鈥檚 corporate university management 鈥榥eeds democratising鈥
Running universities like companies has helped them look outwards, but they risk an exodus of young talent from relentless reforms

Running universities like companies has helped them look outwards, but they risk an exodus of young talent from relentless reforms

The proportion of students who want their universities to ramp up networking opportunities has quintupled, Australasian survey finds

Philosopher tells Oxford Union people must realise 鈥榯he world does聽not end鈥 when you have disagreements

Coming changes to UK higher education鈥檚 second biggest pension scheme will add millions to costs at exactly the wrong time, leaders say

Academy聽鈥榓t the heart鈥 of humanity鈥檚 failures to get to grips with scale of the issue,聽warns president of聽Arizona State University

Faculty groups say 鈥榳e are already seeing staff and faculty leaving the state鈥 in response to proposed legislation

System comes under strain during difficult period for industrial relations but most appear committed, despite some notable departures

Controversial move to聽stop students bringing family members puts UK behind its rivals in international recruitment,聽but聽spiralling migration could lead to even more measures further down the line

Takeover of聽private institution by larger public one 鈥榟olds lessons鈥 for sectors haemorrhaging students due to demographic decline

Science聽may be the best tool humanity has to improve our social conditions 鈥 but we must steer it in the right direction, writes Carolina Torrealba

While other nations are reaching saturation point, the US has the scope to derive greater benefit from international education, says Allan Goodman

UQ flags new residential complex as accommodation council urges students to 鈥榩ounce鈥 on mid-year vacancies

Auckland v-c wants to use M膩ori knowledge and research on misinformation to help tackle UN goals

International students spend billions in the UK and the聽vast majority return home. So why do anti-immigration measures target them, asks Ben Moore

Legal backers say 鈧40 million class action case could set precedent for universities in around 50 countries bound by the Lisbon recognition convention