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But one expert suggests closer ties with Beijing may not be as straightforward as Kremlin thinks
Symbolic and practical support has come from across Europe, but views differ on whether continued Russian cooperation could end or abet the conflict
Amid chaos, non-profit groups work to help an estimated 20,000 Indians leave war zone
Proportion of leavers going overseas for further courses on a downward trend that predates pandemic
After helping to build version of Silicon Valley near Moscow, Reif calls Russian invasion unacceptable
Russia has ‘turned its back on the international community’, says Berlin
US ends Trump-era approach after scores of arrests, repeated failed prosecutions and growing criticisms
Gujarat seeks to entice overseas institutions with ‘headache-free’ offices in gleaming tower blocks
International community ‘should take in academics unable to continue teaching in Hong Kong’, say scholars
Students and faculty welcome eased measures but remain wary, emphasising need for higher caps on daily arrivals
Canberra’s work rights strategy influences make-up of new arrivals, as Perth changes entry rules again
Funding council statistics lend weight to anecdotal accounts that academics are self-censoring scholarship on superpower
‘Seemingly small regulatory requirements readily spawn large bureaucratic responses,’ says City president
Tokyo’s tight border controls could undo decades of education exchanges, say scholars
State Department ‘circumvented Fulbright board’ to shutter programme, putting applicants in ‘danger’, says Heather Nauert
Mistreated foreign lecturers welcome ‘endgame’ of marathon dispute but some say strings attached to a proposed deal are unacceptable
University of Birmingham chancellor ‘very open’ to partnership
Stick to Science campaign launches with more than 200 signatories covering industry, charities and academia
Measure to expand NSF and retain foreign scholars with scientific expertise faces showdown over Senate’s even tougher approach to China
Eager recruiters, lenient testers and delusional students must all share the blame for dire retention, studies suggest
In new role, Bill Rammell seeks to boost international ties, resist nepotism and push beyond pockets of excellence
While 5,000 students could arrive in April, the rest will not be admitted until October, effectively ruling out campus-based studies before 2023
Lord Johnson urges UK to learn from Canada and adopt measures to ‘de-risk’ growing recruitment
Border restrictions, differing national Covid strategies and changing demographics have all made significant impacts on overseas recruitment over the past two years. Simon Baker examines the latest data from five major recruiting nations and considers what they might presage for the future
But country should also be ‘wary of complacency’ after apparently passing previous goal
No apparent health rationale for ‘impossible’ new deadline, as requirements rewritten for third time in a week
Growth in co-publications slowed in 2020 and so far shows decline for 2021
Universities across Europe to launch ‘Stick to Science’ campaign warning against ‘politicisation’, as football-style ‘transfer market’ emerges to tempt away UK-based researchers
Universities in non-anglophone nations should limit teaching in English and offer English support to students and academics, says Rosemary Salomone
Two years of low-quality online provision has left one stranded international student homeless, unemployed and heartbroken
Experts back ‘cautious approach’ for universities but stress importance of continuing collaboration
But new recruits and direct arrivals miss out under new Western Australian rules
Continental students disappearing as post-Brexit funding rules kick in
Call for subcontinent to be recognised as more than ‘just a market for education’
Western Australia defers return of quarantine-free travel in response to Omicron variant as eastern states open up
Government cracks open door for select few, but thousands still stuck overseas
Kick-starting a conversation on national funding levels is useful, but collaboration on frontier-led research needs attention, says Jan Palmowski
Sector says overseas learners should be able to focus on their courses, but government also has an eye on labour shortages
Russia and Taiwan improve in list of the world’s most international universities, while UK and Canada backslide
Ex-governor also wants UK to offer visas to youth born after 1997 to counter clampdown on free speech
Brussels officials say their new European universities strategy, including cooperation on higher education laws, will improve student mobility and academic cooperation
The University of Toronto president has ‘doubled down on internationalising’ while remaining rooted in the Canadian metropolis for almost four decades
Pledges of $90 million help Ivy League campus join small club depleted in recent years by financial stress and prioritisation of domestic applicants
Selective institutions more likely to show their favouritism publicly, study finds
Data suggest that European mobility and recruitment from Asia are rapidly diversifying campuses on the continent
With concerted efforts, the UK could attract far more than 600,000 international students to its shores, says James Pitman
Students who escaped the chaos in Kabul are beginning their second terms at overseas universities. But can they concentrate on their studies amid trauma, worries about their families and uncertainty about their future prospects? Pola Lem considers what more universities can do to help
Figures suggest just a tenth of previous entrant numbers from some countries got a study visa
Legislation gives Westminster government power to block or impose conditions on acquisition of intellectual property in 17 areas
Biden administration promises simplification long sought by research universities
French president seeks to rejuvenate thinking about common continental identity
Despite the pandemic, trade disputes and geopolitical tensions, several factors will continue to push and pull Chinese students abroad, says Nicolas Chu
Government move brings meaning to the motto ‘Scholars for a Year, Cheveners for Life’, says advocate
Students collaborate to combat food shortages, as Covid widens the gap between Australia’s haves and have-nots
Six humanities projects reportedly vetoed and China collaboration nosedives as Discovery outcomes finally see light of day
Jury takes three hours to agree nanoscience expert lied about Wuhan ties to sidestep pressure campaign against binational research partnerships
European University of Technology exploring how to become a single institution, but going beyond a legal umbrella raises regulatory and funding questions
Policies risk inciting behaviour worse than 2000s immigration scams, expert warns
Universities see room for reasonable new legal restraints on foreign-funded scientists but fear overreach as final deal comes into shape
Survey of staff in 10 different countries also suggests general satisfaction with moves overseas, alongside lack of understanding from ‘onshore’ campus staff