Visa fraud fears as Australian universities target Indian market
Wavering Chinese demand has driven a dive into south Asia, where unwary recruiters ‘get burned’

Wavering Chinese demand has driven a dive into south Asia, where unwary recruiters ‘get burned’

Job and course cuts in England bring concern on impact of ministerial pressure, plus warnings that universities are ‘lazily misusing’ cost-of-living crisis

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media

Following ministerial orders, England’s independent regulator will look at business and management courses, including online provision

Ucas also forecasts continued dominance of China among overseas applicants

Even universities in the hermit kingdom largely cut themselves off from the rest of the world. Yet those few Westerners with direct experience of them suggest that while critical inquiry is...

The historian discusses ‘glimpsing the nightmares’ of early colonial Americans in his Wolfson prize-nominated book on witchcraft, and why he took early retirement from academia

The next exercise should clarify its purpose and language, relax its disciplinary focus and refine research culture, says James Wilsdon

Smile you’re being watched: What is academic life in North Korea really like?

Protesters who disrupted gender theory book talk accuse university of ‘repression’ after criminal complaint lodged

SOAS director says he’s seen little evidence colleagues are prepared to confront ‘difficult questions’ of African brain drain and ‘unequal’ relationships with institutions in the developing world

Joshua Katz dismissed after renewed probe of sexual misconduct case

Researchers perceive weakening of institution’s international and multilingual atmosphere

Women on fixed-term contracts in Russell Group universities less likely to return to work after maternity leave than permanent peers, study finds

Increased use of ‘team science’ may have been a major factor in latest REF scores, say experts, but this may be no bad thing