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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Upholding of immigration protections, after challenge led by University of California, means legal relief for about 200,000 students
Five key recruiting nations’ crisis measures on international student recruitment compared and analysed
Failure to improve predictions compounds concerns over effectiveness, accuracy and racial bias
Racial awareness mounts, but partisan barriers loom larger
As annual lobbying spending drops to $75 million, bigger campuses take more control
Move to reject Obama policy seen costing 200,000 borrowers some $11 billion
Model of student-driven flexibility and sharing could aid all institutions, course organisers say
Plea, without specific rationale, risks alienating students and political allies
US universities warn against punishment that goes beyond individual visas
Schools of government have traditionally employed a technocratic approach to preparing public officials. But with polarisation straining political systems to breaking point, Paul Basken reports on calls in the US for more aggressive approaches, while Karthik Ramanna sets out how his Oxford programme attempts to repair the fractures
The secretary of higher education for the state of New Jersey talks about her path to a career in policy, family history and handling racist attitudes at college
Questions raised about the responses of universities in marketised systems as they focus savings efforts on non-permanent staff
Former biotech chief cooperating in expanded investigation
Improving remote learning may be smartest move universities can make, quality chief advises
National move to reconciliation tests boundaries of academic freedom, say some observers
UC plans four years without requirement while it tries to write its own test
Actor and fashion designer husband accept months in prison over fraud in daughters’ USC admissions
Academics recognise need but fear loss of attention on basic science
专家警告称,对中国“窃取”病毒研究的指控有可能损害美国的疫苗研发和海外招生工作
Government backs universities on imperative of satisfying full-tuition visitors
Anticipating a renewed coronavirus outbreak, California State University plans for semester online
Student wariness may deliver final blow to crisis-weakened institutions
With August goal in mind, diagnostic development could get TV-based model
Universities warn of harm to victims and protest the quick implementation of controversial new measures