Impact Rankings 2025: results announced
Malaysia and South Korea are making the most rapid advances in tables showing best universities for sustainability, writes?Patrick Jack
Malaysia and South Korea are making the most rapid advances in tables showing best universities for sustainability, writes?Patrick Jack
Western countries should reflect on whether their approach is privileging certain forms of knowledge, language and mobility, says Cheryl Yu
Universities in the Global North must treat those in the Global South as equals, sharing resources, leadership, authorship and IP, says Manuel Barcia
Almost?seven million students studying in overseas location, Unesco reports, with four million of them in Europe and North America
Overseas?students need skills and knowledge tailored to their national contexts, say Wei Li,?Rachael Hains-Wesson,?Kaiying Ji and?Yinfeng Shen
These rankings?celebrate universities’ impact – but also hold institutions to account, highlighting where the sector is falling short
Weeding allows collections to evolve with academia – but redistributing books to other libraries could help equalise?knowledge access, says Natalie Pang
Self-funded sector swells as government offers institutions more flexibility to recruit internationally
THE?is?refocusing on core and deeply trusted rankings while retaining a diversity of measures and metrics, says Phil Baty
Universities should not overlook artificial intelligence for student support purposes, says machine learning expert
Chinese students begin to make alternative plans after Trump targets visas, but anglophone destinations not guaranteed to benefit
Everybody loses if first-world universities do not share the benefits with source countries of doctoral students, university leaders say
HKUST offers unconditional acceptance to international students at Harvard in wake of US government crackdown
Growing spending on research and development in Global South leading to more papers, but increased scrutiny needed to identify misconduct, say publishers
Tariff war between superpowers?may lead to more Chinese students choosing universities closer to home, but international collaboration?must?be protected,?say university leaders