Forgotten Wives: How Women Get Written Out of History, by Ann Oakley
Not before time, the female partners whose intellectual contributions enhanced their husbands’ work get long-overdue credit, writes Emma Rees

Not before time, the female partners whose intellectual contributions enhanced their husbands’ work get long-overdue credit, writes Emma Rees

The humanities can seem to struggle in our science-dominated world, but even a utilitarian view must hold them as foundational to a decent society

ARC says it communicated rule change clearly, but applicants say it forces them to plagiarise to qualify for funding

Some academics depart China amid allegations of overly strict Covid rules and narrowing space for academic freedom

Much of the language now used by universities feels like a kind of literary lockjaw that is too dull even to poke fun at. Joe Moran considers the causes and disastrous consequences

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

Crawford Medal-winning historian on why New Zealand doesn’t have borders, big screens are a good thing and research grant applications are too long

Tributes paid to scholar whose ‘vision of rebuilding the humanities and arts’ left deep mark at the City College of New York

Aggrieved pro-Trump offshoots rise on campuses, complete with allegedly rigged national leadership election

One in five public health researchers pressured to conceal or change their findings, study finds

The narrative that the humanities are haemorrhaging students, funding and political favour is deeply felt around the world. But the evidence of the disciplines’ decline is considerably more nuanced,...

Produced by and paid for by the University of Portsmouth

Stifled subjects: is STEM growth really stunting the humanities?

Some students still cheat despite thinking it is illegal, international survey finds

Female scholars twice as likely to feel constrained as male colleagues, poll shows