We¡¯re gathering data on interdisciplinary science and online learning, and making improvements to some of our existing rankings, to capture insights on more of the work that universities do, says °Õ±á·¡¡¯s chief data officer
The authoritarian country has rich datasets for research collaboration, but while some new regulations may feel familiar to European eyes, any comfort must come with big ethical caveats, an expert says
The only way to get a permanent contract seems to be to take a teaching position. But that isn¡¯t where my skills or interests lie, says Vanessa Baxter
Barack Obama¡¯s favourite political thinker Yascha Mounk has made his career attacking right-wing populism. His latest target ¨C identity politics fostered on US campuses ¨C will surprise many of his acolytes, he tells Matthew Reisz
Affordable AI-powered writing software offers some hope to scholars unfairly criticised for their imperfect English, but more radical change is required, says Natalia Kucirkova
Departmental hierarchies, job precarity and institutions¡¯ need to protect their star professors enables bullies to thrive in Britain¡¯s top universities, says Wyn Evans
If Stanford¡¯s now-departed president had fully faced up to dubious practices in his lab and insisted on corrections, his infractions of research integrity could have been forgiven, says David Sanders
At the heart of the debate about the global competitiveness of EU-funded research is the question of whether science should be a tool for industrial policy or a global power for good, says Jan Palmowski
From Coldplay to Queen, the world¡¯s biggest bands often meet as students ¨C yet universities are seldom mentioned in song. Jeremy Clay ponders why and unearths some lost exemplars ¨C including a long-lost Dutch psychedelic paean to the University of Leicester
There is near-universal dismay among scientists over continued delays to UK association to Horizon Europe. It is time to replace bean-counting with vision
Greening of health research depends on goodwill and unfunded, uncoordinated efforts of individual researchers, according to study commissioned by Wellcome Trust
The new rules are welcome, but change will only truly occur if institutions finally get over their obsession with publications, says the Hidden REF committee
Academics granted unique access to ¡®black box of algorithms¡¯ to explore social media¡¯s influence on 2020 presidential election, but many question if ¡®independence by permission¡¯ model can endure
ByteDance¡¯s pre-regulation ¡®strategic¡¯ move will allow academics to pull more data from the platform, but critical work may still have to use workarounds if the company extends its veto on publications
Perhaps the EU could give additional assurances that it wouldapply corrections if the UK won significantly less funding than it put in, suggests Jan Palmowski