National knowledge service A UK-wide digital library for British higher education is in reach, says Ann Rossiter, if we can sort the licensing out 3 November
One-note union dirge: change the record and listen to our record Ideology is preventing the UCU et al from appreciating the private sector's diversity and its fair treatment of staff, argues Aldwyn Cooper 3 November
Pathways to 'Plod' The impact agenda rewards unoriginal thinkers and threatens to snuff out the bright 'Sparks' who could change the world, warns Bill Amos 3 November
Leader: Bread, not political poses By favouring grandstanding over academics' worries for the profession and their future, the UCU risks irrelevance 3 November
Kropotkin's heirs apparent Alan Ryan on Occupy Wall Street, a refreshingly rational anarchist movement 3 November
Theory of reciprocity Social scientists and scientists will serve the public best by working together to present their findings, Alice Bell argues 27 October
The wonderful wizard of US Felipe Fernández-Armesto is bewitched by the methods of an Arkansas teacher 27 October
Redistribution of labour With working hours and unemployment on the rise, Harriet Bradley argues that it's time to consider the logical alternative: job-sharing 27 October
Community of scholars: lifelong learning needs lifetime readers' tickets Offering library access to alumni and independent researchers helps to keep a university at the heart of its community, says Susan Gibbons 27 October
Careering out of control By collaborating to provide careers advice to teenagers, universities will help to broaden outreach, says Tessa Stone 20 October
A national institution: should it be left to die or is it worth reviving? If the University of Wales survives the calls for closure, its leaders need to clarify its purpose, cautions alumnus Deian Hopkin 20 October
Still a masculine noun Research remains male-dominated and the equality guidelines proposed for the REF don't go far enough, says Carole Leathwood 20 October
A league apart University rankings are inapplicable to the developing world and risk doing damage there, argues Adam Habib 13 October
A footnote - Far from it, publishers are key in advancing scholarship Journal owners want academics to work with them towards the shared goal of furthering and disseminating research, says Graham Taylor 13 October
The madness of kings The longer one wears the crown, the more tyrannical he becomes - a senior academic offers a theory of vice-chancellors' behaviour 13 October
Plug in - but tune in, too An iPad or Kindle does not magically improve education, says Cathy Davidson 13 October
Survival of the freshest Sally Feldman takes umbrage with those who decry student orientation week 6 October
An inappropriate model Adjust for population, GDP and funding, and US dominance disappears, Howard Hotson argues. And so does the case for neoliberal university reform 6 October
Metric perversion The use of journal rankings and citations data throughout the REF would hamstring innovation, argues Hugh Willmott 6 October
Voice of experience: we cannot afford to waste our untapped potential We must protect widening-participation funding for the sake of the disadvantaged, disenfranchised and disillusioned, says Martin Bean 6 October
Peers, review your actions Help usher in universal open access - stop giving free labour to publishers that lock research away, says Michael Taylor 29 September
Unshackled minds help institutions to conquer the greatest heights The top-ranked universities allow their scholars the most freedom, a lesson many governments have yet to learn, warns Terence Karran 29 September
Unsensational news A specialist journalistic organisation could allow academics to explain their work without distortion, suggests Peter Geoghegan 29 September
Leader: Take your money elsewhere So the UK tells foreign students with its visa regime. Australia once did too, but it has changed its tune to hang on to a rich trade By Ann Mroz 29 September
Expelliarmus debitum! Harry Potter a metaphor for higher education? Kevin Fong explains - almost 29 September
Stapel diet of fraud Miles Hewstone discusses a heinous data-faking scandal and the lessons that must be learned to stop the ‘betrayers of the truth’ 22 September
States of emergency Alan Ryan on the post-9/11 decade and one increasingly divisible nation 22 September
Data be damned: REF's blueprint for systemic intellectual corruption The abandonment of metrics will leave the assessment exercise exposed to sheer subjectivity and bias, warns Andrew Oswald 22 September
Sighs on the prize Anachronistic academic awards for students can pose headaches for long-suffering staff, writes Adrian Furnham 22 September
Flock may change course Studying abroad is of great value and the cost of UK degrees will shortly become prohibitive. Peter Brady identifies a dangerous mix 15 September
Seize the global day We live in a connected global environment, Graeme Harper says, so why does the sector act like it's 1911, not 2011? 15 September
'Progressive' austerity and the obvious death of Lib Dem England Clegg and Cable offer nothing new, just a return to Depression politics. They have sown the wind, says Simon Lee, and will reap the whirlwind 15 September
Leader: Not such a superpower after all It is folly to emulate a US higher education system that, according to OECD figures, is failing so many of its young citizens By Ann Mroz 15 September
Find teeth, then sharpen US public servants badly need union support, says Felipe Fernández-Armesto 15 September
Rethink the route to goal Widening participation needs reconceptualising for a new age, say John Butcher, Rohini Corfield and John Rose-Adams 8 September
More money, more choice and a virtuous circle of innovation After the turbulence of the past year, business secretary Vince Cable sets out the government's vision for the future of higher education 8 September
Pioneers need not apply The research councils' use of peer 'preview' is fundamentally flawed and a pathway to mediocrity, argues Donald W. Braben 8 September
THE Scholarly Web Ambitious undergraduates are aware of it, PhD students fear it and applicants often despair of it: competition in the academic job market is very tough indeed. By John Elmes 8 September
Leader: It's lost control again As poor steering threatens to cut off the supply of homegrown STEM graduates, coalition policy looks set to crash and burn By Ann Mroz 8 September
Taking Lithuanian leave Malcolm Gillies asks: how much time off do we really need or deserve? 8 September
Invasion of privacy Even recalcitrant scholars can’t escape the mobile’s reach, says Sally Feldman 1 September
Greatest story ever told? Jeremy Black is making a stand against the grandiose claims made by far too many blurbs on the back of academic books 1 September