Universities’ expert input is needed far beyond government departments
Policy institutes’ lack of strategic variation risks overheating the competition for airtime with national policymakers, says Diana Beech
Policy institutes’ lack of strategic variation risks overheating the competition for airtime with national policymakers, says Diana Beech
Founding head of UK super-agency calls time on 34-year career in higher education
While public universities concede to government demands, their private counterparts look less likely to back down
Hepi director argues that?England’s funding system is ‘not broken’ but just needs to catch up with inflation – and that ministers should get behind it
Petition opposes merging of Japanese, Chinese and Korean into combined programme amid fears of ‘significant’ staff cuts
Ten years ago, just a handful of UK universities had policy institutes. Now, amid the drive for impact, they are ever more common. But are they really the golden ticket to policymakers’ parlours? Are...
Scaled and standardised,?lowering entry requirements for disadvantaged applicants can contribute to a fairer society, says Jon Datta
Right to sue?universities over free speech complaints among the elements of act to be removed by education secretary ?
Combining subjects with computer science seen as way of increasing the attractiveness of courses not linked to jobs
‘Statutory tort’ allowing?for universities to be sued over alleged free speech breaches likely to be removed when legislation is reintroduced later this month, according to reports
Newly merged mega-university set to open in January 2026 but neither of its current leaders will be at the helm
Institutional communications branded?‘inconsistent, inauthentic, and rather annoying’ by study participants
Landmark deal should raise questions about publisher’s practices on peer review, citations and special issues, say research sleuths
Analysis of 113 institutional accounts reveals almost a third have posted a deficit, and one in four reported a negative cash flow
The scientific record should reflect what actually happened, not a sanitised narrative that leaves out the messy bits, say Ivan Oransky and David B. Allison