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Overseas students must still isolate if they are identified as a close contact of a Covid-19 case, even if they are double-jabbed with a UK-approved vaccine
While Australasian international education leaders are upbeat about vaccination, few expect ‘meaningful’ student arrivals any time soon
Sector should be ‘cyber-savvy’ but embrace Chinese STEM PhDs, conference hears
International students ‘look at Australia as one nation’, state-based education advocates stress
Northern rivals have stolen a march on sectors Down Under, whose recovery could be a long time coming
Marathon legal battle by Italy’s lettori for equal rights may soon end after European Commission’s intervention
Australian surveys reveal primacy of vaccines for both inbound and outbound students
Move offers alternative to testing centres used by thousands of international students to enter Western universities
EUA report imagining scenarios for 2030 also paints picture of higher education being squeezed by markets and authoritarianism
Institutions need to do all they can to stay visible and be ready to welcome students back when borders reopen, says Stephen Connelly
New Cambridge guidance will help academics avoid collaborations that pose a threat to security or academic freedom, says Stephen Toope
Prospect of international student arrivals boosted by Sinovac approval and reopening of borders to Australian travellers
Portuguese use in particular has seen relative decline as Brazil-based authors seek collaboration outside region
Investment of £2.25 million seeks to stem decline in applications
In the third decade of the so-called Asian century, European and North American universities and governments continue to neglect the world’s most populous continent. As Asia grows ever more powerful, this must change, scholars tell Joyce Lau
The pandemic has exposed some anglophone universities’ financial over-reliance on overseas students. But if internationalisation takes a step back in the coming years, how much will be lost pedagogically? And will anything be gained? Anna McKie reports
Official censure comes amid claims that pioneering institution is only ‘a Chinese college that bears Nottingham’s name’
Some British scholars are following in their European peers’ footsteps in a bid to improve their research opportunities overseas
Despite immense challenges of getting out of the country, some Afghans have managed to reach UK and continue their studies and academic careers
Only learners fully vaccinated against Covid-19 with an Australia-approved jab will be allowed in
Analysis of author movements also suggests some disciplines have seen major loss of talent over past 25 years
Policies geared to a ‘low-skilled guest worker society’ belie Australia’s pretensions to recruit the ‘best and brightest students’
THE survey finds strong support for Covid-19 vaccine passports among international students, who are keen to study in-person
Nuclear submarine announcement elevates importance of universities’ soft power influence, says former PM
College’s defenders say its demise will dilute free expression, but education minister says its original critics opposed it for the same reason
AI expert re-emerges at top Chinese university as former employer finds Uighur study breached Australian research code
Trade minister Graham Stuart says cross-government support will allow UK universities to grow overseas student numbers by 30 per cent
Factors such as students ‘hedging’ applications across countries could mean data overstate final recruitment
New requirements to ensure migrants are financially self-sufficient will ‘weaken’ Sweden’s universities and high-tech industries, critics warn
Australia and New Zealand’s isolation continues, but global collaboration is ever more crucial, says Dawn Freshwater
Former Tennessee researcher wins first court trial of Trump-era crackdown, while Biden stance remains unclear
Observers worry that treasured institution could fracture, just like the region’s political partnership
New analysis commissioned by Hepi and UUKi offers ‘stark reminder’ of financial impact that overseas students bring
Institutions in poorer nations have the eager students, and hope the West is now ready to supply the expertise
Fait accompli shutdown ‘a metaphor for the decline of Western liberalism in Asia’, say experts after Singapore decision
But offshore bulwarks take many forms – and in some institutions, staying at home works best
A commitment to truth based on scientific evidence and academic freedom is more necessary than ever, say Philip Altbach and Jamil Salmi
Pushing for importance of education could be only way to secure a future for the country, conflict resolution scholar urges
Hundreds of thousands of foreign students continue to be left out as classes resume in September
Long-standing challenge on research disclosures grows more urgent with rising China tensions and anti-Asian discrimination
Former foreign students recount memorable experiences in world’s most isolated country, including being openly spied on by their hosts
The near impossibility of obtaining spousal visas will deprive the post-Brexit UK of expatriate academics’ expertise, says Edward Vickers
Electoral rather than immunological considerations could determine when international students are allowed into Australia
Despite spending more than £700 million, dreams of a diversified knowledge economy remain some way off, British expert claims
Concerns about the fate of those ‘at particular risk’ from the Taliban lead to apparent reversal of policy
Strategist also warns that politicisation of funding means universities in countries most dependent on the government would fare worst
Tanya Plibersek proposes accord with political opponents, while former Liberals accuse ex-colleagues of lacking leadership
Education minister concedes impact of plummeting international enrolments, but says things would be worse without intervention
Calls for newer institutions to ‘know their place’ fail to understand the need to engage both with surrounding communities and major international challenges, argues Keith Burnett
Scholars who have stayed at home concerned about ‘double standards’ on salary, funding and promotion
Access and safety in the one package, as island nation banks its Covid management success
Remote research institute acts as model for cross-border innovation
Vice-chancellors acted like fawning retail attendants in Pretty Woman, former prime minister says
Sydney and UNSW vow to collaborate more, while shrugging off snarky stereotypes
Major delays in embassy processing times suggest State Department is not prioritising issue, lawmakers say
Asia operations are either being expanded or newly opened as the countries' universities aim to keep students engaged and enrolled
Tens of thousands of students from subcontinent set to arrive in Britain this autumn
Responsible border control has, ironically, left Australia and New Zealand trailing their competitors
Continuing students slow to return despite government green light, while visa applications from first-timers are binned
Education minister cites buoyant student experience ratings as evidence of the country’s ‘fundamentals’