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Staff serving on campus during lockdown are 50 per cent more likely than their housebound peers to be at ‘high risk’ for health problems
The popular conception that US academics are uniformly liberal fails to take into account universities’ subject breadth, says John R. Thelin
Female academics, especially mothers, face the double challenge of patriarchy and neoliberal management
Fiery Senate estimates session probes funding councils’ 'natural justice' obligations when researchers are impugned
Health and exercise needs overlooked as work demands and self-expectations leave time for little else
The pandemic has brought the power and consolations of scholarship to the fore. But with a particularly grim Halloween upon us, M. R. James’ ghost stories warn us that the pursuit of knowledge does not always end well, writes Shane McCorristine
What does it say about our labour culture that a tenured professor stuck in an elevator did not even consider cancelling his class, asks Irina Dumitrescu
Some universities acknowledge ‘errors’ totalling millions of dollars but deny deliberate ‘wage theft’
Australian survey finds little change in morale, workload or fatigue, but next year’s results could tell a different story
New lecturer Saloni Krishnan gives practical tips, from recruiting research assistants on a budget to keeping research on track while juggling teaching responsibilities
Environmental experts also more likely to have taken steps to offset or reduce impact of travel
Critics says that 60, or even 65, is too young to end an academic career
Physicist Brian Cox, author Bernardine Evaristo and former Ucas chief executive Mary Curnock Cook also recognised
Early career scholars, seasoned academics and institutions themselves all benefit from the creation of alumni affinity groups, writes Gretchen Dobson
The pandemic’s demolition of barriers and bureaucracy clears the way for a better higher education sector, says Pat Tissington
Leading human rights barrister calls on UK law schools to address ethnic minority under-representation among academic teaching staff
Psychologist says scholars are still in ‘emergency’ mode and universities should recognise that the year ahead ‘may not be brilliant’ in terms of teaching quality
The grand achievements of those who came before are often held up as inspiration for current members of the academy, but a more nuanced view might be required
A willingness to lie and manipulate beyond what most people can imagine can do wonders for a career, notes Irina Dumitrescu
Education minister Ingrid van Engelshoven says too much research funding is now competitive, leading to intense work stress
Following the BethAnn McLaughlin and Jessica Krug revelations, Rachel Moss offers her tips for spotting online fakers
‘I can’t afford to self-isolate for two weeks’: academics working on pandemic research disclose the ways they are protecting their personal health
Blindness gave the late politics professor Roger Williams a unique ability to focus on the structure and coherence of what was being said to him. And though his interrogations could be exacting, Lincoln Allison wishes more sighted academics shared his talent
Dismissing plagiarism as a low-level academic misdemeanour ignores the potentially deadly consequences of letting cheating go unchecked, says David A. Sanders
Toronto president tells summit that ‘quality of city’ is crucial for university headhunting
Those planning new universities might think that a good institution will attract top staff wherever it is located. But is the quality of the environment beyond the ivory tower really so insignificant – and has the pandemic changed the calculus? Paul Jump runs through our survey results
Australian university insists it is just planning for potential scenarios, amid claims that 3,000 jobs are at risk
Not all academics are in a position to churn out endless papers during lockdowns – and not all should, argues Michael Marinetto
After students gather to party, campus moves to online one week into semester
Academic endorsements cast little light while entrenching privilege, says Vincent Hiribarren
But in the new normal, the situation for female academics with children is even worse, says Enrica Maria Ferrara
The war survivor with multiple degrees from universities around globe discusses her roles as advocate for refugees and for the understanding of Africa in HE
Top researchers call for universities and funders to sign up to new set of principles to stamp out harassment
Bullying and harassment is still widespread in our institutions, and this must change, say science leaders
Male security guards are the workers most at risk of dying from Covid, but George Bass is happy to be one of the ‘expendables’
Research reveals that focus on ‘individual excellence’ in academia isolates disabled staff
Just because you can’t meet in person, it doesn’t mean you can’t network, say a number of academic experts
Physical events are not going away but they must open up and embrace the best of the digital world, says Jim Woodgett
Daily tweets, cake baking and discussion of James Bond film titles have all helped keep Anthony Smith sane
Still on mute? Then let’s begin, says Emma Rees
Aspirants are convinced they can succeed against the odds because they have always succeeded in the past, analysis of ‘quit lit’ suggests
Shakespeare, the Beatles and Tina Turner are often referenced in the titles of academic literature, study finds
Progress will be very difficult if there is a loud cohort of academics who remain fundamentally opposed to it, says James Blackwell
African researchers say meeting digitally overcomes cost, distance, social discomfort and environmental damage – but even online, inequalities remain
Florida State University’s move triggers concern about impact on female employees, as coronavirus continues to spread
Report shows heavier burden for UK students compared with other parts of Europe, with the country’s research funding boost ‘a chance to reform PhD education’
Leader of US’ most prominent historically black university says proper funding of such institutions will improve diversity in academia
‘Personal crisis’ may turn out to be a blessing in disguise for some insecurely employed staff
Study analysing impact of previous epidemics suggests that confidence in science will be maintained but coronavirus will damage perception of scientists
The secretary of higher education for the state of New Jersey talks about her path to a career in policy, family history and handling racist attitudes at college
Former biotech chief cooperating in expanded investigation
The problem is measuring all women, with or without children, against patriarchal standards, says Srila Roy
Improving remote learning may be smartest move universities can make, quality chief advises
Anticipating a renewed coronavirus outbreak, California State University plans for semester online
Weekly broadcast from University of Toronto vice-president has captured the attention of thousands
After sex crime conviction, elite university gave financier-donor his own office
The award-winning author and journalist on the essay that changed her life and why academic research revolves around men
University finances are supposedly staring into the abyss – but we shouldn’t get giddy, says Paul Jump
Pointless meetings, fraught commutes and whiffy shared fridges are mercifully off limits during the coronavirus lockdown. But what else are faculty glad to be rid of? And what are they pining to return to? Seven academics let us know
Global recession may make public and policymakers think more about those ‘at the bottom of society’, says social policy academic