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Analysis from Education Insight also shows increased UK market share against rivals like Australia and US
Scholars say government is giving universities a tall order without concrete support plan
Universities UK International says fall in transnational student numbers in Australasia is opportunity to boost collaboration
Revised visa figures show net migration hit a record high in 2022, fuelled by an increase in students from outside the EU
With potentially worrying changes to Australia’s research security arrangements odds-on to proceed, universities want clarification on amendments
Minister responsible for higher education tells European universities to stop recruiting its best minds
Curricula should be adapted to suit local skills needs, Edinburgh conference hears
Home Office list of top-ranked universities giving graduates visa eligibility adds two Chinese institutions, but stretching to India ‘would boost UK employers’
Government signals review of older US tie-ups and appetite for more Brazilian students, as leading rector says institutions do not have to build their strategies on English-language tuition
Overseas universities could profit from ‘escape route’ role, as China’s women resist political pressure to produce the next generation
As UK home secretary, James Cleverly should offer a warmer welcome to people who bring skills, resources and so much more, says Tim Bradshaw
As country proposes tough new sanctions for sharing regulated technologies, except with the UK and US, sceptic asks whether nuclear submarine pact is worth the trouble
James Cleverly becomes home secretary as former prime minister David Cameron replaces him as foreign secretary
Early figures indicate new enrolments of international students have increased by 2 per cent in 2023-24
Changes to visas and foundation years likely to hit income, deans fear, with big repercussions for parent universities
Universities in the Gulf are increasingly attracting scholars and staff from across the Arab region and beyond. What are the main pull factors? And how is this shifting the knowledge centres of the Middle East?
Sadiq Khan claims Susan Hall is ‘against foreign students’ coming to the capital, but she accuses him of ‘making things up’
Locals with overseas qualifications are no longer welcome in China’s state-owned enterprises, conference hears
Australian researchers propose alternative way of redistributing university resources, but warn it won’t be easy
CUHK scholar sacked days after being denied re-entry to island says room for China-critical research is shrinking
Problems may result from focusing on branch campuses, resisting online provision and partnering only with top 1,000 institutions, says Mike Winter
Drawing on Web of Science citation index, Clarivate report shows fivefold acceleration in published research output from China between 2009 and 2021
As US institutions’ enthusiasm for collaborating with counterparts in Qatar and UAE wanes, China offers funding and language support to increase its influence
Trudeau’s immigration minister accuses institutions of ignoring costs to students from abroad and demands a recalibration
US domestic students achieve better GPAs when cohabiting with someone from overseas, but study finds no effect on international students themselves
Smaller rooms, repurposed golf courses, refurbished government buildings among the suggestions to tackle the ‘wicked problem’ of accommodating students in Australia
The special administrative region’s status as an international crossroads has been severely shaken by the National Security Law and stringent Covid lockdowns. But sector leaders remain buoyant about boosting ‘non-local’ recruitment – and not just from China. Pola Lem reports
Academics welcome the move, but some are concerned over displacement of island’s students from its top institutions
Removing ‘speed bumps’ and abolishing the ‘bamboo ceiling’ would help to overcome Australia’s ‘self-inflicted brain drain’, forum hears
Commission led by former universities minister calls for ‘internationalisation at home’ to be a central part of the UK’s next higher education strategy
Diplomats leave India as stand-off expands, limiting visa services and putting especially high risk on small rural campuses
Committee also wants ‘Team Australia’ approach, bankrolled by a levy, to ‘open doors’ in Africa, Asia and Latin America
McGill and province’s other English-language universities see dire threats to their finances and diversity
Australia’s proposed international education levy is replete with policy contradictions, new paper argues
The post-war scheme is 75 years old this year, but global conditions still cry out for inclusive international collaboration initiatives, says Maria Balinska
An early draft of the Knowledge Security Act suggests mass screening non-EU students and academics based on discipline, departing from an on-demand approach that won admiration abroad
Successful efforts to boost China’s citation standing are part of plan to push regulation away from current global norms, says thinktank analyst
Greater understanding of the risks will help plot a sensible course between academic freedom and government control, says Fiona Quimbre
Growth rates run counter to government policy objectives, Australian conference hears
While Britain has gained ground as top-choice destination, it is being pipped by a resurgent Australia
As geopolitical tensions and political scrutiny mount, knowledge diplomacy becomes both harder and more important, says Shearer West
Census data on higher education qualifications, which is broken down by age and sex for the first time, shows that 60 per cent of some age groups graduated from university
Agency accused of violating Lisbon convention for quizzing students who earned foreign credit after governance rift at the University of Theatre and Film in Budapest
Recruitment target is a ‘staged performance’ unlikely to yield real results, according to academics
Decision might be politically motivated but will do little to help science graduates, researcher suggests
Observers welcome efforts to tackle visa fraud but say new compliance efforts must be ‘robust’
Three years after province cut its budget by a third, leaner flagship university sees a moment to leap; students hope they can make it
Despite drop in Western students, cheap education and science-focused offerings continue to draw international learners from Russia’s political allies
Increased visa fees and health surcharges are likely to compound the Brexit effect on EU academics’ willingness to stay in the UK, say five researchers
The internationalisation process should centre on quality assurance – but this is not necessarily a top priority in post-conflict regions, says Michèle Wera
Creating a cross-border qualification within a year is hugely ambitious but the wider benefits of mobility should be huge, say Jo Angouri and Jan Palmowski
While Covid has perforated the rankings bubble of the front runners, better commercial engagement and refined research measures have boosted much of the middle tier
Asia saw the largest rise of all continents in research quality, teaching score, and overall performance in the latest World University Rankings
North America has also revived while Oceania’s international outlook has dipped. Patrick Jack picks out key rankings trends
UK universities are overwhelmingly represented at the top of the international outlook pillar
In departure from previous small-scale efforts, initiative seeks to retain thousands of students for work after graduation
The authoritarian country has rich datasets for research collaboration, but while some new regulations may feel familiar to European eyes, any comfort must come with big ethical caveats, an expert says
New Delhi could wreak considerable damage to Canadian universities by playing on Indian families’ concerns over student safety abroad, says academic
Swinburne abruptly terminates 30 per cent fee reductions for foreigners who fall foul of ‘gotcha’ clauses
Institutional partnerships are on the rise, but the sector must do even more to join forces to tackle global challenges, writes Linda G. Mills