Worries about Islamo-leftism in France and free speech in England reflect disciplines¡¯ straddling of science and activism, says Alexis Artaud de La Ferri¨¨re
Universities need to review the unhelpful websites and unwittingly ageist admissions procedures that prevent older people becoming doctoral students, says Alison Etches
Trauma suffered by lecturers who were forced to teach in-person during coronavirus spike should not be dismissed, say Paul Hanna, Carl Walker and Mark Erickson
Pausing the assessment timetable for tenure and promotion may seem helpful, but it will actually deepen disparities on campus, says Jennifer Greenfield
No institution will be able to make it alone amid the pandemic-induced tumult, so let¡¯s make shared values the antidote to the crisis, says Ferruccio Resta
At a time when marketised models are dominant, we must build on initiatives that put the stress on social justice and community engagement, says Peter Mayo
As Netflix¡¯s film on Sutton Hoo illustrates, collaboration between academic and commercial research enriches understanding of history, says Susan Greaney
The discipline¡¯s existence reflects an enduring Western belief in the inferiority of knowledge production specific to different cultures, says David Simon
Shazia Jagot¡¯s life was transformed by the chance to read Chaucer as an undergraduate. It is crucial, she argues, that a new generation of black and ethnic minority students get the same opportunity
Forthcoming policies on ¡®low-value courses¡¯ and grade inflation must acknowledge how pandemic will hit graduate prospects and undergraduate preparedness for years to come, says QAA deputy chief executive Vicki Stott