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Articles by Pola Lem ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>
As overhaul presses staff and students to broaden horizons, president discusses handling faculty pushback, maintaining a vital Samsung partnership and dealing with disgruntled alumni
Dame Athene Donald tells THE about calling out unacceptable behaviour with empathy and reflects on her legacy as outgoing master of Churchill College
As the domestic youth population plummets, Korean institutions are looking to international students to make up shortfalls. But can such a strategy compensate ¨C and can it be enacted in time? Pola Lem reports from Korea
Chungbuk National University head says simply ¡®selling degrees¡¯ is not in the interest of students or the sector
Times Higher Education journalists name the academics and administrators at the heart of the sector¡¯s biggest debates over the past 12 months
Government schemes to bolster higher education come amid ongoing population decline and recent drop in doctoral students
University of Tehran plans outposts in India, Iraq, Syria and Georgia, plus closer ties with Russia and China
Financial shortfalls follow student hunger strikes and faculty suspensions and ¡®bode ill¡¯ for long-term future of South Asian University
After killings of dozens of students, faculty and staff, and with 1,000 still displaced, Sapir College looks to rebuild and renew
Leading Korean and US institutions are equal partners in development of New York outpost
Sector predicted to grow significantly in next decade, spurring a flurry of research and start-up activities
Central Asia could offer an academic landing ground for stranded learners who fled war 18 months ago, scholar says
Scholars say government is giving universities a tall order without concrete support plan
As seven-year case against South Korean professor Park Yu-ha concludes, academics say the deep political divisions that lay behind it are not going away any time soon
Lack of clear guidelines may put instructors on ¡®defensive¡¯ over students¡¯ use of ChatGPT, researchers say
Even as many universities struggle to keep the lights on, others reap the rewards of strong investment and tumult elsewhere, writes Pola Lem
Institutions ¡®must do more¡¯ to ensure safety of students on their campuses and see that learners know the repercussions of actions abroad, says scholar
Move is latest in sector-wide process of ¡®neutering Hong Kong universities¡¯ by giving legislators say over their decisions, says academic
Palestinian universities in West Bank face losing scholars, while Netanyahu opponents also predicted to leave Israel
Institutions struggle to navigate clash of reality of student drug use with conservative culture
Despite pricey accommodation and high living expenses, learners continue to flock to Korean capital, amid perception of better quality education
CUHK scholar sacked days after being denied re-entry to island says room for China-critical research is shrinking
Favouring of candidates aligned to ruling party could do long-term damage to universities, scholars warn
Michel Mawad fights to keep the lights on at Lebanese American University and its teaching hospitals, and to keep staff while supporting students amid economic and political crisis. But he¡¯s not giving up