From where I sit - 'Pure' and 'impure' thought
"Welcome to the Land of the Pure," a feminist professor proclaimed with a twinkle during my recent research trip to Pakistan. Yet in the aftermath of the assassination of Salman Taseer, the governor...
"Welcome to the Land of the Pure," a feminist professor proclaimed with a twinkle during my recent research trip to Pakistan. Yet in the aftermath of the assassination of Salman Taseer, the governor...
A historical narrative about Turkey is impressive but lacks a framework, warns M. Şükrü Hanioğlu
Rapid global temperature shifts are nothing new, as Steve Yearley learns from a cold country's core
Quality warning for overseas campuses that fail to export 'institutional culture', writes John Morgan
Econometric Analysis of Cross Section and Panel DataAuthor: Jeffrey M. WooldridgeEdition: SecondPublisher: MIT PressPages: 1,096Price: £49.95ISBN 9780262232586This second edition aims to offer a...
The use of reputation surveys in university rankings is controversial. Many do not like the combination of subjective information with objective data and there are concerns that reputation surveys...
Manifesto project strives to defend subject and clarify its aims and impact. Matthew Reisz writes
The leading British expert on Indian archaeology, whose interests embraced much of the culture and history of South Asia, has died.Raymond Allchin was born in Harrow on 9 July 1923 and educated at...
As MBA graduate career prospects recover, the student profile is shifting. Matthew Reisz reports
Yale boss welcomes 'audacious' ambitions of emerging Asian nations. Phil Baty reports
One man's music is so often another man's noise, laments Malcolm Gillies
Inside the main building of the International School of Film and Television (EICTV) in Cuba, the atmosphere is a mixture of warm conviviality and frenetic hard work. Each year, around 500 applicants...
Steve Smith has been knighted in the Queen’s Birthday Honours after steering Universities UK through one of the higher education sector’s most turbulent periods.
University language departments could be left in disarray by plans to suspend a 105-year-old scheme that has given tens of thousands of students the chance to study overseas.
The US has some outstanding universities, but there is a dark side to its achievements, which the UK would do well to avoid