The program has always followed US foreign policy. Leaving people in the lurch is an incomprehensible new frontier, say Marisa Lally and Gerardo Blanco
Attempts to establish alternatives to Gift City and Delhi bring new incentives for global universities but some fear such investment will heighten inequalities
Universities should offer opportunities to US talent because it can ¡®prevent fruitful lines of enquiry from being abruptly cut off¡¯, says head of leading European institution
Rules designed for adversaries do not help against friends, expert warns, as US grills Australian researchers on DEI, ¡®environmental justice¡¯, ¡®gender ideology¡¯ and China links
India¡¯s opening up to overseas outposts has injected new life into a form of transnational education that many observers had considered to be moribund. But will the clutch of early adopters blaze a successful trail for others to follow? And what exactly would that look like? Helen Packer reports
The benefits of a strong brand are accruing for universities and academics alike. Jack Grove explores why reputation matters ¨C and examines the latest results in the list of the world¡¯s most prestigious universities
Long caught up in debates about academic freedom and internationalisation, liberal arts may not survive in city state beyond closure of pioneering partnership