Management and governance
Competition for students and the cash brought in by increased tuition fees explain why universities want to invest in leadership, writes Andrew McRae
Minister outlines plans for TEF and new regulator to tackle problem
The bullying and subsequent suicide of a talented Ivy League scientist exposes ugly truths about the cruelty and dysfunction at the heart of academic science
Minister to set out plans for new regulator to ‘use its powers’ on senior pay in UUK speech
Universities’ shabby treatment of casual academics flies in the face of their professed commitment to education and dignity, says Jedidiah Evans
Iconic Californian institution’s viability as a state university called into question by fall in public support and growing political intrusion, says ex-chancellor
Universities must communicate better if they are to avoid being presented as part of a ‘distant and malevolent elite’, says Dame Minouche Shafik
Just one leader of a top 10 UK university has a Twitter account, report reveals
Vice-chancellor says involving academics in conversations about resources and sticking to the core mission were key to turnaround
Professor warns full university status for complementary medicine institution would ‘downgrade credibility’ of UK sector
Foreign providers plan was misguided, but domestic selective funding option brings huge challenges, say experts
Remuneration committee member formerly led construction company that won £64 million in contracts from university
With the Hungarian government clamping down on universities and championing labourers over philosophers, David Matthews meets those living with the consequences
Creeping political interference in universities, from the UK to Hungary and the US, is part of a worrying shift in attitudes towards higher education
Ruth Simmons, interim leader of Prairie View A&M University, says universities are ‘failing’ at creating ‘fit leaders’
Carol Christ, new leader of the Californian university, also plans ‘free speech year’ for students and staff to engage with topic
Remuneration committees should pay less attention to other institutions when setting their leaders’ pay, says Nick Hillman
UK universities face uncertainty over the impact of Brexit and the TEF, the future for tuition fees and a pensions deficit. Which institutions have the financial clout and diversified portfolios to survive? Simon Baker runs the numbers
Universities used to be thought unsinkable, but the unthinkable – an institution going to the wall – is now a genuine, if yet remote, prospect
Analysis of THE World University Rankings data shows gender gap for top jobs has narrowed further
Australian capital emerging as branch campus hub for country’s universities
The subject-level teaching excellence framework could lead to a lot of stress for no great gains over the institution-level TEF, says Andrew McRae
Recent cases at universities of Mississippi and Southern California raise question of 'moral turpitude'
Claims that outsourcing in higher education improves efficiency are not proven, says analysis
Universities facing the challenges of developing a knowledge economy
National University of Singapore promotes provost Tan Eng Chye
Ellie Bothwell goes through the archives from 45 to five years ago and discovers some recurring themes
Scholar returning to homeland from US to lead university speaks of his concerns
Number of universities eligible to award federal financial aid down 5.6 per cent year-on-year
Scholar claims she was pressured to sign up to Higher Education Academy and did so without correct documents
Leader of Hong Kong Polytechnic University says institution ‘cannot think of itself as an isolated island’
Sector leader says the UK can offer insights into higher education’s role in regional growth strategies
Labour peer calls for funding council intervention on Glynis Breakwell’s salary
The former president of Carnegie Mellon University will lead the Singaporean institution from 2018
Round table discusses challenges of changing job market and political instability
Conditions that undermine the notion of scholarly vocation – relentless work, ubiquitous bureaucracy – can cause academics acute distress and spur them to quit, says Ruth Barcan
Expanding university enrolment across the world has resulted in universities ‘imitating each other’, says leading scholar
Futao Huang says that calls for Japan’s national universities to adopt more marketised leadership strategies have so far gone unheeded
Arizona State University’s Michael Crow was the highest-earning leader in 2015-16
Jo Johnson takes aim at Southampton’s leader in outspoken attack on ‘sharp increase’ in salaries
Several student accommodation blocks have been discovered with flammable cladding
The inventor of the concept of emotional intelligence explains how the idea can be built into the culture of universities
UK universities’ complacency in the good times has left them ill-equipped to respond to falling postgraduate master’s enrolment, says Michelle Morgan
The sweatshop conditions in which sessional academics work in Australia mirror the treatment of schoolteachers in Victorian times, say Hannah Forsyth and Jedidiah Evans
President of proposed new engineering institution wants to use egalitarian management ethos of King Arthur ahead of its launch in 2020
University of West London wins top honour as Strathclyde and Gloucestershire take home two prizes each
Forty-one per cent of respondents to ACE survey describe political climate as ‘hostile’ to higher education
Hefce tells English universities that confidentiality agreements should be ‘the exception rather than the norm’
The wild variations in the proportions of top grades awarded by different departments and universities must be addressed, says Bernard Rivers
Su Guaning, president emeritus of Nanyang Technological University, says the best universities have a local rival
First female leader of the Ivy League institution has championed diversity during her tenure
Figures from latest Times Higher Education/Grant Thornton survey highlight ‘arbitrary nature’ of awards, says UCU
In our annual survey of vice-chancellors’ pay, which reveals double-digit hikes for some and more modest rises for others, Simon Baker examines how remuneration committees make their decisions amid calls for greater transparency over the ‘arbitrary’ nature of salary increases
Development of Kazakhstan’s university system assessed in new book
UK universities could curry much more political favour if they adopted a more constructive and pragmatic tone, says Sir David Bell
Ellie Bothwell talks with the KAUST president about effective leadership, securing funding and the importance of keeping the local public onside
Higher education could learn a lot from the arts sector about recruiting senior women. Part-time roles and job-shares could be game-changers, says Joanna Read
Unadvertised positions and favouritism 'commonplaces in Swedish academic hiring'
Unions call decision an ‘insult’ to staff in Zimbabwe’s higher education sector
Vice-chancellor believes international scholars can be tempted away from the golden triangle and to the North of England