Academics’ new year’s resolutions: from actual self to ideal self
From giving up Bremoaning and plastic cutlery, to publishing 10 papers in one year and sketchnoting, scholars share their goals for 2017

From giving up Bremoaning and plastic cutlery, to publishing 10 papers in one year and sketchnoting, scholars share their goals for 2017

A study of adolescents’ spaces unlocks mysteries and nostalgia. Enter if you dare, says Emma Rees

The Paul Sears distinguished professor at Oberlin College on the hottest climate change literature, gifting nature books and post-US election reading

From the first fires to other forms of prohibition, a first-rate study charts a complex history, says Robert Gellately

Spanning 200,000 years of human trading, this study considers the influence of technology and the fallout of global interconnectedness, says Juliet Webster

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

A study probes a silent global epidemic: addiction to prescription medication, says David Healy

Book of the Week: lack of effective antitrust oversight leaves us at the mercy of digital platforms, says Julia Powles

Fixing problems in the academic job market by reducing the number of PhDs would homogenise the sector, argues Tom Cutterham

The Higher Education and Research Bill is a chance for institutions to show they do more than research and teaching, says Graham Virgo

The official weekly newsletter of the University of Poppleton. Finem respice!

From respect and metrics to mistakes and biscuits, management scholar John Hendry offers advice

Virtual reality may be set to make an impact on learning, but can it reveal who will keep their resolutions?
Mark Readman thoughtfully provided an 11-point guide to help selfish academics ensure that they stand out at a conference (“How to act like a superstar scholar”, Opinion, 15 December). But might I...