Revolution in Higher Education: How a Small Band of Innovators Will Make College Accessible and Affordable, by Richard A. DeMillo
Joanna Williams on a study embracing technology and introducing a provocative concept of learning

Joanna Williams on a study embracing technology and introducing a provocative concept of learning

Lucy Wooding on a work centred on relations with the Emerald Isle during the reign of Henry VII and Henry VIII

It’s communal, kinky, defiant – but whatever it is, don’t call it that, says Kalle Berggren

Tracey Warr on the middlemen and artists who decide what their works should be called

David Fowler on the influence of venues that at one stage were attracting 3 million visitors a night

Study recommends that universities use financial and market data to assess whether programmes are likely to succeed

Jacqueline Broad discovers admiration for a misunderstood and misrepresented philosopher

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Academics offer advice on how to turn glumness into enthusiasm

From accent intolerance to ‘bamboo ceilings’, Jack Grove examines the challenges of working in a university overseas

Despite the ironic slips, article sheds light on how journals can tackle flawed science

A round-up of recent recipients of research council cash

The good, the bad and the offbeat – the academy through the lens of the national press