EU referendum: scholars weigh case for and against Brexit Public debate in the UK over whether to remain in the EU has been criticised for casting little light. Here, seven academics probe the arguments By Contributors 9 June
The HE bill will sweep away self-regulation of standards. Whose fault is that? The Office for Students will kill off institutional autonomy, says Geoffrey Alderman, and the sector has only itself to blame By Geoffrey Alderman 9 June
Student evaluations of teaching: no measure for the TEF The National Student Survey, one of the pillars of the TEF, is more likely to measure enjoyment than learning, says Wolfgang Stroebe By Wolfgang Stroebe 9 June
China accused of buying influence over Australian universities Beijing said to be making ¡®concerted campaign¡¯ to extend soft power, neutralise opposition to South China Sea territorial claims By David Matthews 9 June
Jo Johnson: new provider criticism like opposition to post-92s Rebuffing claims that opening up sector will endanger its reputation, minister says ¡®we have heard these concerns before¡¯ By Chris Havergal 9 June
Canada looks to overseas students to rejuvenate ageing population Students viewed by government as welcome immigrants, but questions over capacity and provincial policies remain By David Matthews 8 June
¡®We are tough¡¯: a rector¡¯s fight against corruption in Kazakhstan Krzysztof Rybi¨½ski on changing Narxoz University¡¯s culture and the lure of ¡®the best meat in the world¡¯ By David Matthews 7 June
Regius professorships: universities hosting 12 new posts unveiled First Regius posts for Wales and Northern Ireland in expansion marking Queen's 90th birthday By Chris Havergal 6 June
MPs to hold inquiry into ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ Office removal of overseas students ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ Affairs Select Committee reports on fallout from ETS language test fraud claims By Ellie Bothwell 3 June
Publish research promptly, not when it suits you, ministers told Sense about Science study highlights examples of political convenience governing publication dates By Chris Havergal 2 June
EU referendum: does UK research really benefit from membership? While the UK is a net contributor to the European Union overall, it does get back more research money than it puts in, figures suggest By David Matthews 2 June
The week in higher education ¨C 2 June 2016 The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world¡¯s media By THE reporters 2 June
White Paper proposals on new providers go too far, too fast Allowing challenger providers to spend a mere three years on probation risks harming the reputation of UK higher education, warns Bill Rammell By Bill Rammell 2 June
EU-funded professors deny claims of bias from Brexit campaigners Jean Monnet chairs say they encourage full debate on the union, although one has written that when the EU is criticised, ¡®our instinct is to defend it¡¯ By David Matthews 31 May
How much will the TEF cost universities and the taxpayer? James Andrew Smith looks at the likely administrative costs of the teaching excellence framework in the light of the costs of the REF By James Andrew Smith 30 May
Scientific excellence ¡®at risk¡¯ from Brexit The UK¡¯s leading role in shaping the future of science would be lost if voters choose to leave research ¡®superpower¡¯, pro-Remain voices warn By Jack Grove 29 May
TEF ¡®not meaningful¡¯ until discipline data available Institution-level statistics will be ¡®too generic¡¯, THE/HEA webchat hears By Chris Havergal 27 May
NSS manipulation claims ¡®raise questions¡¯ about data reliability Allegations of ¡®inappropriate influence¡¯ emerge on survey that will be key TEF metric By Chris Havergal 26 May
Tuition fees 'force students to pick degrees by salary prospects' Canadian academic argues people should get access to free higher education in return for their contribution to society By Chris Havergal 26 May
The week in higher education ¨C 26 May 2016 The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world¡¯s media By THE reporters 26 May
Chinese student market: can the West weather a perfect storm? David Matthews considers a flurry of ¡®threats¡¯ to the conveyor belt of arrivals and what Western campuses can do to shockproof their systems By David Matthews 26 May
The 10 commandments for influencing policymakers Nick Hillman offers academics advice on managing expectations and ensuring that their research has a big impact By Nick Hillman 26 May
R¨¦sum¨¦ whitening: why I use a ¡®white name¡¯ when applying for academic jobs After failing to be shortlisted for several jobs, a black British lecturer decided to apply to universities using a ¡®whitened name¡¯ By Anonymous 25 May
Who even wants the TEF? Justification for the teaching excellence framework in the 2016 HE White Paper is flawed, says Dorothy Bishop By Dorothy Bishop 25 May
Which universities would lose out from Brexit? Data show deep dependence on EU funds by some institutions and subjects By David Matthews 25 May
Students ¡®not enthusiastic¡¯ about teaching excellence framework Ministers press ahead with plans to assess institutions despite warnings from research they commissioned By Chris Havergal 24 May
Universitas 21 rankings: UK top while India and China overtake US Governments overall are spending more of GDP on tertiary education but less on research By David Matthews 24 May
Part-time postgraduate support scrapped in Wales Institutions face losing up to a quarter of their total funding council grant as cuts from Welsh government bite By Chris Havergal 23 May
Historian snubs $1 million Israeli academic prize Feminist historian Catherine Hall will not accept her share of a lucrative award, calling her move an ¡®independent political choice¡¯ By Jack Grove 23 May
To Brexit or not to Brexit? EU referendum survey now open A Times Higher Education survey on voting intentions for the historic poll is seeking the views of all UK higher education staff eligible to take part 23 May
Will likes of Google and Facebook really offer degrees in the UK? Experts mull over Jo Johnson¡¯s aim to open sector to foreign companies and universities By John Morgan 23 May
Syria¡¯s exiled academics tell their stories Researchers have much to contribute to the study of law, education, engineering and healthcare, suggests new collection By Matthew Reisz 22 May
HE White Paper plans place the market, not students, at the heart of the UK HE It is time to challenge the government¡¯s proposals and ensure quality education for all, says John Holmwood By John Holmwood 20 May
EU referendum: students back staying in but may be unable to vote Poll finds widespread support for UK's membership of EU, but also confusion about when the poll is, and how to register for it By Chris Havergal 20 May
Higher education bill seeks powerful Office for Students Regulator will promote market, distribute grants, award university status and have power to enter premises with warrant By John Morgan 19 May
University of Melbourne v-c backs uncapped fees for some degrees Glyn Davis was ¡®reluctant supporter¡¯ of full fee deregulation, dropped ahead of July election, and now backs plan for ¡®flagship¡¯ courses By John Morgan 19 May
US presidential race: ¡®fear¡¯ drives students to rally vote Alarm over Trump, coupled with excitement over Sanders, prompts students to try to boost turnout. Jon Marcus reports By Jon Marcus 19 May
The lost honour of the life of the mind Fred Inglis on the fate of the academy in an era of calm-voiced propaganda and disgusting new shapes of intellectual life By Fred Inglis 19 May
When universities select by ability, nobody wins Tim Blackman¡¯s vision of higher education for the 21st century is one in which students of varying abilities learn successfully together By Tim Blackman 19 May
The Queen¡¯s Speech 2016: higher education sector responds Key figures respond to the Queen¡¯s HE announcements 18 May
Higher Education and Research Bill announced in Queen¡¯s Speech Government plans to make it ¡®easier¡¯ for new universities to launch By John Morgan 18 May
Labour Party responds to ¡®dangerous¡¯ HE White Paper Shadow minister for higher education, further education and skills, Gordon Marsden, offers his thoughts on the government¡¯s HE plans By Gordon Marsden 17 May
HE White Paper: is the New College of the Humanities Jo Johnson¡¯s Byron Burger? John Gill asks whether the universities minister had anyone in mind when he formulated his plans to open up degree-awarding powers By John Gill 17 May
Higher education White Paper: Success as a Knowledge Economy Everything you need to know about the HE white paper and the Higher Education and Research Bill 16 May
HE White Paper: fees could go down as well as up under TEF Vice-chancellors remain concerned about reputation impact of dividing universities into three tiers By Chris Havergal 16 May
HE White Paper: quality plans back QAA, appear to criticise Hefce Government says it could designate sector quality body in future to protect co-regulation By John Morgan 16 May
The HE White Paper could bring ¡®Ofsted tyranny¡¯ to universities Success as a Knowledge Economy is the culmination of several unwelcome trends in higher education, writes Joanna Williams By Joanna Williams 16 May
HE White Paper is just the beginning of the reform process Nick Hillman picks the higher education White Paper apart, but warns there is still plenty of distance to run before legislation By Nick Hillman 16 May
Are these Donald Trump's higher education policies? Senior aide Sam Clovis on what US university policy might look like under a Trump administration By Scott Jaschik for Inside Higher Ed 16 May
HE White Paper: Five key talking points THE editor John Gill assesses whether the White Paper does enough to answer critics of the government's HE policies By John Gill 16 May
HE White Paper: degree powers from day one for new providers Alternative providers should also be able to charge ?9,000 tuition fees, says government By Chris Havergal 16 May
Higher education White Paper: key points at a glance Everything that you need to know about Success as a Knowledge Economy By Chris Havergal 16 May
HE White Paper: TEF link to fees stays, but will be phased in Government postpones introduction of differential fee caps in response to higher education sector concerns By Chris Havergal 16 May
HE White Paper: moves to boost private providers 'dangerous' But supporters back easing of degree powers and university title as step to 'innovation' By John Morgan 16 May
UK frets over overseas students as Australia backs 'super growth' UK parliamentary group voices concerns while international education plan launches in Australia By John Morgan 15 May
Beware Brexit brain drain, warns Oxford chancellor Without the competitive advantage of EU links, UK universities will be outgunned in the fight for top talent by rich US universities, says Lord Patten By Jack Grove 14 May
HE White Paper: the higher education sector responds Key figures from the university world respond to the higher education White Paper, Success as a Knowledge Economy 13 May
White Paper: will TEF link to multiple fee caps be dropped? Plans for 'failure regime' also on the agenda for higher education bill after Queen's Speech By John Morgan 12 May
FoI costs? University ¡®spies¡¯ only add to them An online experiment proves that part of the bill for complying with the Freedom of Information Act is self-inflicted, says Louis Goddard By Louis Goddard 12 May
World insight: Australia defers HE funding reforms as loan debt mounts up Money for universities will be spread ever more thinly unless enrolment numbers are brought under control, says Warren Bebbington By Warren Bebbington 10 May