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Articles by Jack Grove 榴莲视频>
Global network of research universities aims to help displaced learners as United Nations hits halfway mark on access target
Radical proposal to overhaul admissions to the UK's research-intensive universities would tackle ‘elite formation’, say LSE and Oxford professors
High-profile or opinionated candidates may receive short shrift with ‘CEO in all but name’ Lord Vallance firmly in charge of UK science, experts predict
Improved fortunes of UK-based researchers follows return to Horizon Europe, but grantee numbers are still much below pre-Brexit levels
Forcing UKRI-backed researchers to publish their papers as preprints would save ?40 million annually and ‘accelerate scientific progress’, says thinktank
Universities minister acknowledges ‘financial peril’ faced by UK higher education sector but insists potential remedies will ‘take time’
Money awarded under Horizon Europe Guarantee helped scholars remain competitive as Britain returns to Europe’s research programme, says UKRI’s international champion
New Labour government believes decade-long budgets will lead to more industry investment in science and fewer precariously employed researchers, but not everyone is so convinced
As tech giants spend staggering sums on artificial intelligence, the head of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council explains why it’s vital for academia to engage in this ‘hot’ area of research
Difficult conversations about how the REF’s post-2029 open access books mandate will be financed cannot be avoided, say experts
At a time of increasing financial constraint, jobs are being shed even in UK departments that ride high in the Research Excellence Framework, while time allocations for research are being cut. Can a loss-making activity like research survive outside traditional institutions, asks Jack Grove
Rethink on Research Excellence Framework’s demand that submitted monographs should be freely available follows fierce condemnation of a policy described as ‘unaffordable’ and ‘excessively bureaucratic’
Success of those mentored by highly regarded scholars suggests ‘chaperone effect’ is increasingly important, finds study
Surge in students using ‘decline my place’ function ahead of A-level results day flagged by chief executive Jo Saxton
Studying the heavens might seem a detached activity but the impact of stargazing has been immense throughout history, explains Nobel laureate
Shock results in July’s general election mean there are many more academics in parliament, but narrow majorities are just one reason why their constituencies are likely to be their main focus
Departing London Met vice-chancellor says English regulator’s data-driven rules do not help socially disadvantaged students
University had already built ?31 million home for exascale supercomputer now targeted by spending cuts
厌倦了在作者名单上的落后位置?一项研究表明,在姓氏上发挥创意或是解决方案
Academic who claims she was forced out of university for exposing silencing of gender-critical feminists says she is ‘extremely pleased’ by settlement
Nobel prizewinner reflects on the early hype over graphene, why Brexit damaged British science, and how geopolitics is harming research
Goldsmiths creative writing lecturer talks about the difficulties of revisiting his psychological breakdown for his acclaimed memoir The Bullet
Extra financial assistance would support wider unseen benefits of university-led research, says science advocacy group
Hefty pay packages and patchy record on declaring financial data should prompt tougher scrutiny of for-profit sector, says critic