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Articles by John Gill 榴莲视频>
The journal publisher Elsevier has hit back after being pilloried for supporting an anti-open-access bill in the US Congress.
Mr Willetts' professed love for the arts and humanities disciplines looks rather like discipline of another stripe entirely
The head of the Student Loans Company is reported to be being paid through a private firm rather than directly, a mechanism that can be used to reduce income tax liability.
With the government poised to shelve its HE bill, opponents of pro-market plans have scored a victory, however partial or fleeting
David Cameron is reported to have made a dramatic intervention in the university reforms, shelving the higher education bill that was due this spring.
Delays to the annual grant letter may be down to government plans to announce an easing of the AAB rules that are to introduce competition for students between institutions.
Acquiescence to Browne policies contrasted with NHS leaders' solidarity. John Gill writes
The National Union of Students has proposed 10 alternative uses for the ?60 million that ministers apparently wanted invested in a royal yacht for the Queen’s jubilee.
Oil giant Shell is to close its main UK research and development base, moving the laboratory activities overseas.
The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council has been warned that the deadline set for final decisions on its controversial “shaping capabilities” programme may be too tight to allow the necessary consultation with researchers.
Bloomsbury institution's ?500 million 'masterplan' includes campus near Olympic site. John Gill reports
A new chief executive has been appointed to the Natural Environment Research Council almost five months after its previous head stepped down.
A new Department of Chemistry is to be established at Lancaster University, more than a decade after its old department was closed.
The most happily international higher education systems aren't the superpowers. John Gill writes
A university that has been on the funding council’s “at risk” list for 12 years – longer than any other in England – has been removed from the register.
A professor of English studies at the University of Strathclyde has been named as the new director of research at the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
The vice-chancellor of an Australian university is to step down along with his deputy over “irregularities” that helped a close relative to secure a place at the institution.
Thousands of students are due to march through London on 9 November in a “day of action” coordinated by the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts.
Three scientists, including one who died just days ago, have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2011.
Up to 6,000 undergraduate places that are being auctioned off to low-cost institutions will go to further education colleges rather than universities, the Labour Party has claimed.
Cuts and inflation eat away at spending review deal - and researchers' goodwill. John Gill writes
Publishers, scholars, funders must seek consensus, says the head of a new task force. John Gill reports
The Labour Party would reduce the annual tuition fee cap to ?6,000 if it were in power, Ed Miliband has said, in an apparent move away from favouring a graduate tax.
The Scottish government has pledged to increase funding for universities in a spending review that sets the budget for the next three years.