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The flexibility and insightful observation that cultural ‘outsiders’ are forced to develop confers several advantages for academics, says Adrian Furnham
Videos of glamorous scholars sipping coffee portray a lifestyle far removed from the toxic culture of overwork faced by academics, says Rituparna Patgiri
Risk-averse mindset, fervour for meetings and ‘time sink’ labour-saving ploys leave everybody overburdened, finds Melbourne study
Cultural studies academic Rachael Gunn’s breakdancing performance at the Paris Olympics went viral for all the wrong reasons. One year on, she tells John Ross that although processing the ridicule has had to take priority over her academic career, she would do it all again
If the UK doesn’t want skilled migrants any more, maybe my contributions would be better appreciated in the Global South, says Meron Wondemaghen
As academics fear being replaced by AI, the security staff who wave them through every morning are being replaced by strangers, says George Bass
Applications for professional service posts decline as appeal of working in universities ‘fades’, but academics face more competition than ever
Facing a thesis whose bibliography alone was longer than any essay I’d ever written, I was convinced that this time I’d gone too far, says Polly Penter
When student complaints were made against a high-achieving female scientist, her institution launched a one-man inquiry that found her blameworthy merely ‘for doing my job’, she writes: a ‘textbook case of institutional gaslighting’ that was a betrayal of scientific standards
Excess work hours ‘consistently’ correlate with ‘moderate to severe’ anxiety and depression, Australian survey finds
Genetics expert and failed union presidential aspirant removed from sessional academic duties over call for ‘Zionists’ to be ‘executed’
Australian employee representatives say universities are too ready to surveil workers, while higher education regulator suggests additional methods
Honours also bestowed on Oxford emeritus professor Ursula Martin and Science Committee chair Chi Onwurah
Satisfaction with pay and benefits lags well behind other sectors but career development improving, survey finds
Once praised as key workers, low-salaried university employees dedicated to student safety are increasingly seen as redundancy fodder, says security guard George Bass
Race lacks obvious front runner, with Mohamed El-Erian largely unknown outside academia and Sandi Toksvig proving divisive
European universities urged to re-evaluate structures and support for employees after ‘profound’ shifts in jobs market
Using jokes where appropriate can build trust, diffuse anxiety and enhance learning, says doctoral supervision award winner
Blanket bans on the amount of time staff can spend out of the country reflect ‘compliance-first’ mindset of UK universities, say critics
When classes move outside, we all know that half as much will be learned but twice as much will be remembered, says Zachary Michael Jack
Guidance on facilities, accommodation and equality monitoring may need to be redrawn after landmark judgment, gender-critical scholars insist
After the furore of Oxford’s election, no obvious frontrunner has emerged to take the high-profile role at Cambridge. Some say the institution needs a politically engaged figurehead, others want someone who can sort out internal fractures
Survey of first-generation scholars finds many struggle with ‘unwritten rules’ of academic life
Overly cautious institutions pushing ‘bullshit jobs’ on their staff ‘destroying academia from within’, says neuroscientist
With US academia under siege from the Trump administration, universities elsewhere are contemplating offering ‘asylum’ to disaffected researchers. Here, four former US academics now established abroad reflect on the potential culture shock that awaits US émigrés
Thousands of academics and professional services staff are losing their jobs across the UK. What are their chances of finding another position, either in higher education or elsewhere? Tom Williams talks to several people who have been forced to find out, while Alexandra Wilson recounts her own story
‘A poor communicator who ghosts me’: disaffected research students and supervisors have similar grievances about each other, survey reveals
While not everyone has a flair for it, popular writing can boost audience, income and professional enjoyment. But no silly titles please, says Lincoln Allison
A scholar’s job is not just to learn – it’s to create. And that requires a completely different skill set from consuming it, says Ilana Horwitz
Research assessment has made huge progress but measurement of community remains half-baked, say Mats Persson and Jan Ch. Karlsson
Subscribing to nearly everything published by journals is no longer feasible in these financially straitened times but librarians can provide creative workarounds to ensure journal access, says Liam Bullingham
The benefits of a strong brand are accruing for universities and academics alike. Jack Grove explores why reputation matters – and examines the latest results in the list of the world’s most prestigious universities
Higher education news feeds are currently dominated by near-daily announcements of large job cuts across the UK. But what effect is all this having on the atmosphere within the departments affected – and, indeed, across the sector in general? Four scholars give their takes
Editors’ failures to stick to advertised time frames and formatting requirements cost authors extra effort and stress, says Rob Sowby
Can it be our responsibility as employees to better prioritise our well-being when the workload imposed on us goes so far beyond what can be done in a 35-hour week, asks Joan Taylor
The all-consuming nature of their work means that academics risk a loss of connection and even identity when their careers end, says John Tregoning
With his witty tales of lovelorn globetrotting academics at the University of Rummidge a far cry from campus life today, Jack Grove assesses the master comic novelist’s work and relevance
The celebrated campus novelist and former University of Birmingham literature professor has died. Christopher Bigsby recounts the life of ‘a serious man who wrote comic novels’
No one transitions overnight from a full-time academic career to a much more self-determined and lightly specified routine, says Harvey Graff
Former Brunel vice-chancellor alongside former Cambridge leader and King’s vice-president
Security guards’ jobs would be easier if others also had the knowledge and equipment to respond to medical incidents, says George Bass
Academics are only revealing their own biases if they believe the television presenter’s behaviour represents working-class values, says Joe Baden
With the University of Rural England’s hopes of survival resting on a bailout from a disgruntled tech bro alumnus, John Gilbey’s seasonal tale sees its embattled vice-chancellor go back to the future in Silicon Valley
The far-right president rails against academics’ supposed sense that they are superior. A scholar forced to sell books to make ends meet feels anything but
With working hours full of interruptions, early mornings offer the best chance to pursue labours of love. But how to get going – especially if you are not a morning person? Three scholars debate the virtues of online versus in-person meetings, companionship versus solitude, and coffee versus pipe tobacco
Publishers used to recognise that theirs was a relationships business. But now the road to immortality is much lonelier, says Adrian Furnham
Times Higher Education journalists name the change-makers at the heart of the sector’s biggest debates over the past 12 months
Academics who rely on the British Library’s unmatched collection are still feeling the impact of a devastating cyberattack a year ago. Jack Grove hears from those affected and considers how another catastrophic breach might be averted
Burnout is rife in an era when the traditional attractions of academia to obsessives are diluted by many new duties, observes Joseph Cronin
Universities’ instinct to ‘de-risk everything’ makes things worse for everybody, says academic émigré
University staff like their workplaces more than people in other sectors but spend less time being there, surveys find
Neurodiverse academics and those from non-English backgrounds can struggle with verbal etiquette – but we don’t mean to offend, says a UK academic
Some days all I can do is watch Gilmore Girls. But on others I may come up with an idea that changes my whole research field, says Vikky Leaney
Let's not overlook the transformative power of education to spark curiosity, build resilience and drive positive change, says Rahim Somani
Victims may feel more comfortable disclosing incidents to supervisors than to the killjoys who shut down their 4am corridor parties, says George Bass
When my babysitter fell through, why couldn’t an exception be made so I could attend the fancy £90 dinner, asks Eve Hayes De Kalaf
Administrators at US colleges are increasingly defective and detached from education but I’m too old to try something new, says a faculty member
With the audiobook industry booming, university publishers are turning everything from hot new scholarly titles to Karl Marx’s catalogue into engrossing listening. Matthew Reisz speaks to academics, producers and publishers about what makes a great audiobook and where the industry goes next
Academics and students are getting older, on average. Do universities need to adapt to manage a community with a widening age span?
A ground-breaking physics experiment underlines a proud scholarly tradition that relies on purpose, dedication – and money, says Keith Burnett