Encouraging academics to spend time with scholars from outside their own discipline will be vital to tackling today¡¯s grand challenges, says Annette Rubery
With one more year to go until the end of a decade that is transforming universities worldwide, Times Higher Education looks at the trends that have shaped the past 12 months
Peer review is lauded in principle as the guarantor of quality in academic publishing and grant distribution. But its practice is often loathed by those on the receiving end. Here, seven academics offer their tips on good refereeing, and reflect on how it may change in the years to come
Australia¡¯s twice-unlucky research grant applicants raise questions about the assessment process, but they could help elevate science as an election issue, says John Ross
Chester¡¯s Tim Grady, recently shortlisted for the Cundill History Prize, is proof that smaller universities can produce researchers who compete with the elite. John Morgan writes
If access to European research funding is to be maintained, more UK research universities need to forge formal links with EU institutions, says Peter Coveney
Which is the better option when it comes to running academic journals ¨C the professional editor or the academic one? Rachael Pells analyses the pros and cons of each
Dutch figures show just how little time professors get for their own research. It may be easier to pursue your intellectual interests outside the university system, says THE reporter David Matthews
In the very different cultures of St Vincent and the Faroe Islands, whaling forms a key part of their identity. Scholar Russell Fielding gets a real insight into the hunting tradition. Matthew Reisz reports
After a rare, chance encounter with an enthusiast for one of his books, Felipe Fern¨¢ndez-Armesto reflects on why so few academics gain any sort of celebrity
While widening access is high on universities¡¯ agendas at undergraduate level, class barriers still prevail in the academy. Here, five working-class scholars describe their experiences of ¡®otherness¡¯
The relaxation of the research excellence framework¡¯s submission rules could see research-intensive universities clustered on near-maximum scores, warms Dominic Dean
Research will suffer from the collapse of professional development into financially fixated assessments of ¡®capability¡¯, say Gill Evans and Dorothy Bishop
Germany¡¯s multibillion-euro excellence initiative has encouraged competition, but it has also helped create a close-knit ¡®Berlin University Alliance¡¯
The digital tide will not wash away campus-based learning, believe most respondents to THE¡¯s University Leaders Survey. David Matthews reports on what they see ahead for study options, scholarly conferences, scientific progress and more