India may finally be getting serious about research fraud
A move to combat India’s love affair with predatory journals is an encouraging sign – even if it took a newspaper exposé to prompt it, says Pushkar

A move to combat India’s love affair with predatory journals is an encouraging sign – even if it took a newspaper exposé to prompt it, says Pushkar

A labyrinthine visa process and perverse decision-making are making life increasingly untenable for non-Palestinian academics, says Raja Shehadeh

European funders’ beefed-up open access mandate sounds the death knell for subscription publishing, but academic Armageddon is no closer, says Lenny Teytelman

The ease with which essays can be bought and the difficulty of grading them fairly means they should no longer be used for assessment, says Phil Race

Former university administrator says she struggled to find employment after Turkish university was shut

Staff and academics with little ethical guidance make decisions on behalf of institutions

Advtech to buy Johannesburg campus established by Monash in 2000

Study finds women from the highest socio-economic group are more likely to be in insecure work if they attend university outside mission group than if they had no degree at all

University urged to spend its levy money on training for wider community, not its ‘highest-paid’ staff

For internationalism to succeed, universities must engage more with their local communities and students, major study says

Study challenges the idea that it is primarily parenthood that hinders women’s careers – but in Germany, the picture is very different

Many student exchanges are still driven by professor-to-professor links but they don’t undergo robust evaluation, says expert who has created new success measuring tool