Alison Blunt, Martin Evans and 89 other signatories, including 59 heads of geography departments, reject the claim that geography is a ¡®soft option¡¯ for ¡®posh students¡¯
Susanne T?uber warns that mandatory gender diversity measures will be no more successful in the corporate world than they have been in academia unless genuine organisational transformation is achieved
Vicky Blake outlines recommendations from the University and College Union¡¯s democracy commission, established after intense infighting at the union¡¯s 2018 congress
Unesco¡¯s efforts to enable degree qualification recognition across borders will improve access to higher education for refugees and displaced people, says Joanna Newman
The forcible removal of a visually impaired student should be met with institutional change for one of Britain¡¯s oldest students¡¯ societies, argues Henry Hatwell
Requirements for obtaining the national scientific qualification and good performance despite stagnant funding have contributed to improved citation performance, argue Michele Ciavarella and Pietro D¡¯Antuono
It¡¯s time the higher education community puts old grievances of league tables and excellence frameworks aside to tackle climate change, say Stephen Sterling and Stephen Martin
Studying the arts and humanities has been a core tenet of democratic ambitions for centuries, so it¡¯s no surprise that underfunding those areas of academia throws democracies into crisis, argues Sarah Churchwell
A north-south network for educators has been instrumental in the Irish peace process and needs its funding from the north reinstated, say Noel Purdy and Maria Campbell
The contemplative and risk-averse nature of academia contrasts with the fast-moving strategies of Silicon Valley, but that is our greatest strength, says Kate Devlin
Healing divides between Hong Kong and Chinese students will never be easy, but the academic community is a good place for discussions to begin, argues Brian Wong
A blanket response to student mental health won¡¯t work, says Richard Gascoigne, who argues for using technology to gain a comprehensive understanding of individuals¡¯ needs
There is a vast world of creative media that can help academics cut through the noise of the internet, says Andy Miah. Here are five platforms you should be using
Creating supportive communities to help students cope with racist incidents will provide far-reaching academic and health benefits, argue Charles Sanky and Annel Fernandez
State-sponsored espionage threatens UK higher education¡¯s reputation as an international centre for research and innovation ¨C and universities must take action, argues Ed Lewis
Universities should offer residence halls that support students¡¯ socialising rather than expensive luxury-style apartments, argue Fred Volk and Joshua Brown
Major advances in our ability to acquire data on human health mean we now need to equip biomedical engineers with data science skills, says Frederick Epstein
Corbyn¡¯s speech on setting ¡®the people¡¯ before ¡®the privileged¡¯ expressed a mood of anti-elitism already feeding through into education policy, writes John Morgan
Discipline-based educational research can challenge academics to think about their fields in new ways and can deliver unique benefits to learners, write five scholars
Higher education is about more than giving graduates an earnings boost, but institutions should be able to detail such returns among evidence of their many contributions to society, argues Anna Vignoles
Gender studies is becoming a dangerous field in Latin America and Europe. This has implications for the fight for gender equality everywhere, says Sally Gimson
Greater links between universities, the government, entrepreneurs and charities will help tackle social inequalities in Hong Kong, writes Jeff Streeter
A collection of assessments and reappraisals of Noam Chomsky¡¯s celebrated essay ¡®The Responsibility of Intellectuals¡¯ by the author and other scholars shows the activist academic to be as provocative as ever, writes Matthew Reisz
Steven Beschloss and Gaymon Bennett argue for academics to take their role as public intellectuals to the next phase, one that is personal, engaging and responsive to the problems of the day
Providing mental health support that is appropriate and culturally sensitive is a first step in addressing the racism black, Asian and ethnic minority staff endure in academia, says Jason Arday
Many PhD career initiatives focus on exploratory workshops and alumni panels, but Alfredo Cumerma believes the next step should concentrate on the job search itself