But president Alexander Lukashenko has been forced to replace rectors, and some university managers have refused to expel students ¨C suggesting regime control is not complete
Neoliberal administrators¡¯ policing of institutional reputations and academic colleagues¡¯ condemnation of dissenting voices on issues such as race and gender have led to claims that scholars are losing their ability to engage in free enquiry and open debate. But is academic freedom really the operative concept in the controversies that arise? John Ross probes a highly contested debate
Be more candid about the nature of your foreign collaborations and think about your own moral responsibilities, Australian parliamentarians warn universities
New code of conduct says universities should adopt procedures for confidential reporting of threats to freedom and safety as a result of international collaboration
Observers say the country¡¯s universities are led by loyalists, and have long supported president by expelling opposition students and teaching pro-government ideology courses
Despite numerous announcements by the University of British Columbia, indigenous leaders see big talk from a big institution, but no clearer answers on finding balance
Stricter political and administrative controls on what can be said have led to the creation of a pioneering ¡®free university¡¯, say Katarzyna Kaczmarska and Dmitry Dubrovsky
As Australia struggles to defend its civic values from foreign interference, critics say translators¡¯ banning shows those values are being undermined from within
Scholars should not face official censure for making provocative statements on social media, but they have a responsibility to embody academic values of empathy and self-reflection in their online posts, argues Chris Barker
Government issues arrest warrants for students and files complaint against an overseas academic as protests, some held on university campuses, intensify
Survey of UK academics finds both left and right discriminate against each other in hiring, funding and publishing decisions, leading to self-censorship across the sector