A matter of consent: sexual assaults on campus
Mechanisms for dealing robustly with assaults must be put in place without delay, argues Matthew Wyard

Mechanisms for dealing robustly with assaults must be put in place without delay, argues Matthew Wyard
The piece on LGBT staff in academia was interesting, and it is certainly good that people of all sexualities and gender identities are welcomed into academia, but it is a bit concerning how obsessed...
I have to disagree with Richard Budd’s belief that alumni donations are just weird (“Isn’t asking for alumni donations, well, just weird?”, 25 April). For 11 years I worked on the senior leadership...
Prakash Shah is a little unkind to South Asianists abroad who have to make a living in demanding conditions that implicitly and explicitly enjoin meek intellectual and political conformity (“The...
Having degenerated from scandal to farce, the situation at London Metropolitan University now threatens to decline further. The continuing waves of compulsory redundancies of full-time staff and the...

Four years of collaboration between scholars and creative partners were showcased at the Creativeworks London Festival at King’s College London on 29 April

Class is a national fixation yet if we truly want social mobility we must stop talking about it and take steps to make it a reality

Use of HMRC records could allow reformed DLHE to focus on areas such as happiness and skills

Specialist language in scientific literature can put people off. Doctoral candidate Michelle Reeve asks: is it really necessary?

Scholars should cheer up and learn to take the rough with the smooth, says John Tregoning

New book explores the anxieties of Peking and Tsinghua students caught between their parents, the Communist Party and new Western ideas about education

Start-up firm Spires plans rapid expansion across UK universities, and says it could help social mobility – but others see private tutoring as harming access