The BJP¡¯s permeation of every aspect of higher education will hamper India¡¯s ambitions to be a world leader in research and innovation, says Aditya Sharma
A large ongoing survey at King¡¯s College London is informing the institution¡¯s approach to Covid-19, say Gabriella Bergin-Cartwright and Sharon Stevelink
The modern university should be an honest broker who sets self-interest aside and works for the common good across all areas of its activity, says Sally Kift
The readers¡¯ editors employed by some quality newspapers offer a model for how to protect and promote universities¡¯ core values, argues Priya Rajasekar
To deflect political attacks, universities should emphasise the transformative effects of engaging with structured bodies of knowledge, says Paul Ashwin
Stricter political and administrative controls on what can be said have led to the creation of a pioneering ¡®free university¡¯, say Katarzyna Kaczmarska and Dmitry Dubrovsky
Amazon¡¯s and Netflix¡¯s obsessive focus on using customer data to improve user experience has valuable lessons for universities, argues Mike O¡¯Connor
Vilified abroad and distrusted in their homeland, Chinese students overseas have been marginalised as a result of a geopolitical struggle beyond their control, says Brian Wong
Those who fear a resurgence of coronavirus as campuses reopen can take heart from how Taiwan¡¯s universities maintained in-person teaching throughout the pandemic, explains Cher Chiu
Practical help for students and universities left exposed by the A-level results chaos is needed, not political point-scoring, says former Ucas chief executive Mary Curnock Cook
Sustainable changes in digital learning will result from best practice alongside bold experimentation, say Friedrich Hesse, Volker Meyer-Guckel, Bitange Ndemo, Alexandros Papaspyridis, Rahim Rajan and Suzanne Walsh
Widening eligibility for the new round of the initiative would accelerate the balanced development of global higher education in China, says Li Qingquan
Rather than simply endorsing complaints from the most vocal students and staff, we must react rigorously to curricular exclusions of all kinds, says Steven Greer