Paul Basken joined Times Higher Education as North America editor in September 2018. He was previously a government policy and science reporter with The Chronicle of Higher Education, where he won an annual National Press Club award for exclusives. He founded the State Department bureau at Bloomberg News, was a White House and international correspondent with United Press International, and serves on the editorial advisory board of ASEE’s Prism magazine.
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Anming Hu was acquitted in court prosecution under Trump crackdown on academic scientists with China ties
In year since land-grant institutions learned they were funded by theft, serious conversations have barely begun
Move bolsters fears of political attacks on US higher education and prompts AAUP to consider boycott
Embracing economics after an iconic mountain climb, a daughter of the Deep South takes an optimistic outlook to promoting racial progress
With contention about diversity adding to concerns about employability and declining student numbers, does Classics in the US need rebranding or rethinking? Paul Basken reports
Just ahead of trial, former Wake Forest volleyball coach gets reprieve in return for repaying alleged bribe
Anger growing amid greater awareness and sense of administration failures
Demands pushed by pandemic fears, labour shortages, awakened student athletes and Biden encouragement
Current chancellor of University of Wisconsin-Madison will be private institution’s first female leader
Card, Angrist and Imbens of Berkeley, MIT and Stanford take honour for social investigations
China crackdown remains controversial, but institutions advised of broader reasons to keep tabs on scientists
Case comes after most charged in the case already pleaded guilty, leaving USC and Wake Forest coaches next for trial
Political conciliator finds moment of medical success against Covid a good time to let Biden find successor
Black students expected to be disproportionately hurt by local refusals to accept federal aid, analyses conclude
Beverley Gage leaves Brady-Johnson programme after president insists $250 million funder can pick its advisory board members
Research keeps affirming benefits of ‘active learning’ styles but faculty resistance persists, experts find
Standard university solicitations raised some concern in arresting parents over admissions bribes
Female researchers who socialise less with male colleagues less likely to feel supported in the workplace
Legislative ban leaves medical schools vowing to protect women’s health, and faculty and students likely to flee
University synonymous with Silicon Valley careers now sees long battle with companies over corporate culture
Conservative campaign for control of North Idaho College ends with ousting of Rick MacLennan and anger over masks
Ryan family gift caps seven-year $6 billion (?4.4 billion) funding campaign, designated for research and football stadium
Boston-based university’s 11th campus aims to fill major Silicon Valley need, with a vow of social conscience
While other red state campus leaders struggle, Michael McRobbie stresses consultation and rural services