Cooperative open access can right many of publishing’s wrongs
Publishers used to provide authors with better service – and royalties. But open access cooperatives offer a ray of light, says Harvey Graff
Publishers used to provide authors with better service – and royalties. But open access cooperatives offer a ray of light, says Harvey Graff
Body proposed by former government was seen as a way of upskilling workforce and growing the economy
Theoretical physicist to succeed Sir Anton Muscatelli in September 2025
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,...
Universities are sprawling enterprises with numerous interlinked activities, so winning support for the funding they need is harder than it should be
Canberra’s international education crackdown is sapping sector of funds to diversify, forum hears
Professor Brian Cox and Sire Andre Geim to give keynote speeches at THE World Academic Summit 2024
Essay mills pivoting to offering low-cost services to avoid plagiarism checks
Thousands more students on the autism spectrum are entering universities thanks to improved diagnosis and support from schools. John Ross examines how institutions are adapting to this challenge and...
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media
Submission from new administration on future European research funding programme urges continuing focus on excellence
Economist who invented furlough scheme shares expansive blueprint to redraw English higher education funding
A £14.5 million revamp of the unusual Bloomsbury library has also prompted a rethink about its mission, says director Bill Sherman
专家表示,想要用人工智能改变教育,必须重新启动评估,而且开发人员必须在理解学习过程方面取得突破
The Newsnight producer who persuaded Prince Andrew to give that interview reflects on why her law degree helped to impress in the media, the Netflix film about her ‘journalistic underdog’ story and...