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Articles by John Gill 榴莲视频>
Durham University has been urged by a senior official at Cancer Research UK to return funding it received from British American Tobacco.
An international group of more than 60 academics has accused a controversial evolutionary psychologist of refusing to engage in scientific dialogue, highlighting long-standing criticism of his work in an attempt to protect their discipline from further attack.
Sweeping reforms of French higher education were prompted in part by its performance in world university rankings, the country's higher education minister has suggested.
Fears about the future of postgraduate study in the UK have been raised by a survey which suggests that many current students would not embark on postgraduate study if they had to pay undergraduate tuition fees of ?9,000 a year.
The academic board of the London School of Economics has voted to set tuition fees at ?8,000 in 2012.
The University of St Andrews has issued a robust response to a national newspaper’s allegation that it has inappropriate links to the Syrian regime.
Over half of current final-year students would not have gone to university if they had faced tuition fees of ?9,000 a year, according to a new study.
The vast majority of English universities - if not all - are planning to charge tuition fees above the lower threshold of ?6,000, information released by the Office for Fair Access reveals.
A flurry of tuition fee announcements have been made as the deadline approaches for universities to submit draft access agreements to the Office for Fair Access.
The UK’s leading farming college has joined the growing group of institutions that plan to charge tuition fees of ?9,000 a year in 2012.
Undergraduate claims he was gagged by students' union over contentious article. John Gill writes
Lecturers at Liverpool Hope University are to strike next week in a row over job losses.
The vice-chancellor of the University of Reading is to step down.
Two years ago, Leeds Metropolitan University was the only higher education institution in England offering a substantial discount on tuition fees, charging just ?2,000 a year.
London Metropolitan University is to charge under ?6,000 a year for many courses in 2012, bucking the trend set by other institutions that have rushed to charge ?9,000 a year.
The London School of Economics has appointed an interim director following the resignation of Sir Howard Davies over the school’s links with the Libyan regime.
Durham University has become the latest member of the 1994 Group to announce that it plans to charge the maximum undergraduate tuition fee allowed in 2012.
Up to 200,000 higher education staff face losing their final-salary pensions and retiring later following the publication of a major report on public sector pensions.
Tainted money, allegations of plagiarism and surrender to the demands of angry student occupiers: the London School of Economics’ links to Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of Libyan leader Mu’ammer Gaddafi, has become an ethical and public relations quagmire.
The University of Gloucestershire has appointed a senior official at the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills as its new vice-chancellor.
The London School of Economics has severed links with the Libyan authorities following violence against anti-government protesters that has led to more than 200 deaths.