UK promises fast-track visas post-Brexit and makes ERC cash vow
Research leaders welcome announcements but warn of impact of no-deal departure

Research leaders welcome announcements but warn of impact of no-deal departure

Lennard Davis praises a definitive account of DNA testing

Emma Rees is impressed by a wide-ranging study of how governments have encouraged and discouraged citizens to have children

Angelia R. Wilson enjoys a subtle analysis of the political uses of the figure of the ‘Mexican cowboy’

David Lehmann praises an ambitious attempt to take religion seriously on its own terms

Continuous retraining is widely seen as the answer to the coming job losses caused by automation and artificial intelligence. But are universities the best places to provide it? And are their courses...

The author of An Appeal to the Ladies of Hyderabad: Scandal in the Raj on gods, villains and Bond, libertine Britons in colonial India, and capturing ephemeral events

Technological advances mean an ever evolving workplace. While no one can predict the future, HE investment in lifelong learning will surely help us adapt

Book of the week: Clare Brant enjoys a lively account of a turning point in British history

A significant minority of tenured faculty spend their lives undermining others when they could be working for progressive change, argues Douglas Dowland

Universities, already facing upheaval on several other fronts, fear imminent plans could make it far harder to recruit students

The new president of Boise State University discusses what the Victorians can teach us and how her dream of ‘staying in college for ever’ has come true

Tributes paid to long-serving political science professor

Fees are seen by some as a proxy for quality, so an increase might not be all that bad, says Hepi report

Office for Students’ judgement that for-profit college was ‘not financially viable’ raises questions of why Department for Education extended funding access last year