Academics report harassment at political science conference
Eleven per cent of women and 3 per cent of men report inappropriate sexual advances or touching at American Political Science Association meeting
Eleven per cent of women and 3 per cent of men report inappropriate sexual advances or touching at American Political Science Association meeting
Got some last minute scholarly Christmas shopping to do? Glen Wright has got your back
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media
Times Higher Education’s first major global survey of university staff views on work-life balance finds academics feeling stressed and underpaid, and struggling to fit time for personal relationships...
Academics are likely to be happier at work if their research involves scholars away from their institution, study reveals
Generous leave packages used as a strategy to retain top female researchers in elite institutions, study suggests
Just like Hollywood and Parliament, academia has entrenched power hierarchies. It can’t pretend that sexual harassment doesn’t take place
Institution’s Canadian leader tackles executive remuneration, Brexit and diversifying the university’s student intake in THE interview
Association’s annual meeting discusses teaching in ‘red’ states and need for domestic research
Holly Else reveals the results of a THE poll seeking to uncover the extent of authorship abuses as well as views on what criteria should generate credit
Academia often treats leavers as failures, but some of our smartest scholars are starting to see walking away as liberation, writes Inger Mewburn
Rogier Creemers advises early career academics to be ruthless and put themselves first to move up the ladder
Instead of spending time competing for competitive funding, academics should be given a lump sum, paper suggests
The Imperial College London stem cell biologist discusses her Italian roots, the search for a cancer cure and dealing with a crowded commute
Early career researchers are the ‘working class of higher education’, writes Elisabeth Julie Vargo