With history books increasingly including first-person, ¡®confessional¡¯ elements, authors explain why they take this approach, while other historians reflect on the dangers
Public confusion is one thing, but some subjects provoke quizzical and sometimes dismissive frowns even among colleagues from different departments. Here, nine academics set the record straight about what they do ¨C and why it matters
Survey of UK academics shows widespread belief that leaders have used ¡®disaster management¡¯ to shift focus away from research, cut jobs and increase managerialism
Scientific leaders and politicians have embraced calls to reduce the stress and precarity faced by researchers. Jack Grove examines some radical proposals
As Brussels tries again to push forward the European research area, the bloc remains fractured by investment levels, researcher mobility and national rules
Those who blur the lines between academic and professional staff are the connective tissue in the research ecosystem, say Matthew Flinders and Sarah Chaytor
Relying on academic research, thinktanks translate findings into the language of politicians and media, EUA president Michael Murphy argues ¨C but not always accurately