Management and governance
Chris Kelly said that a female vet was ‘equivalent to two-fifths’ of a male counterpart
Cape Breton University’s board denies departure is related to specific terms of the agreement made between David Wheeler and the faculty union
Provost says institution 'must do better' as independent researchers find focus on excellence has had 'negative impact' alongside top results
Simon Gaskell and Adrian Collette explain why proper engagement is an important driver of institutional performance, teaching and research
Conservative, Labour and crossbench peers all join criticism in House of Lords
An independent investigation is reviewing David Wheeler’s conduct during staff negotiations
Berkeley academic also tells THE event that government initiatives have little influence on the quality of universities
The rector of the University of Antwerp says elite institutions are more focused on themselves than the role of higher education
If the government won’t demonstrate the value and importance of university, then vice-chancellors need to step up and do it, say Paul Woodgates and Mike Boxall
We have all the elements needed to make online courses succeed, but institutional inertia at well-established universities stymies progress, argues Laurence Brockliss
New rector warns against drawing students only from elite and making academics 'sheep with five feet'
PA Consulting survey finds vice-chancellors worrying over ‘barrage’ of policy changes that will lead to ‘golden age’ of stability being lost
One year shaved off time to degree under new national framework
Requesting a log of daily activity means that trust between the institution and the scholar has broken down, says Toby Miller
Mark Gatenby considers what it means for business schools – and universities more generally – to embrace Utopian ways of thinking
Plans for powerful new regulator still face 'difficult time' in the House of Lords
It’s not just EU nationals that universities should worry about losing, says Timothy Devinney, and a shrinking pound won’t help
German institutions should learn from car firms to better attract top talent, say researchers
Not all universities are great at everything, so they shouldn’t claim to be, say Matthew Hartley and Alan Ruby
Government decree on rector appointments comes under state of emergency after coup attempt
Is the average term of office for UK university vice-chancellors getting shorter? Nick Hillman and Tom Huxley find out
University of Toronto must prove professor’s comments constitute ‘violation of law’, says Canadian Association of University Teachers
Combining higher education institutions will be 'catalyst' to improve scholarship, says minister
UUK must help advance equality at the front of the lecture hall through loan write-offs and conferences, says Geraldine Van Bueren
In embracing ‘cognitive capitalism’, US universities have moved from knowledge generation to income generation, argues Henry Heller
The pursuit of high-ranking universities should not be at the expense of education itself, writes Ka Ho Mok
In this Q&A, Jukka Kola, rector of the University of Helsinki, gives his take on the changing face of university leadership
Director discusses life at the world’s northernmost university, and how it leads collaborative research on Arctic issues
International group aims to re-establish core principles of universities
A former laboratory manager claims he was fired from California State University, Northridge due to his religious beliefs
Discussion at THE World Academic Summit explored how league tables can help promote accountability, reports Ellie Bothwell
Nicholas Dirks tells THE summit that free tuition would enable government to 'control' public research universities
Canadian Stephen Toope set to take over from Sir Leszek Borysiewicz in autumn 2017 to lead the prestigious university
Sweden’s leading university pledges to learn after government intervenes in Macchiarini affair
A lack of advice on access and support is a key reason why disabled students are less likely to leave their home country, campaigners say
David Palfreyman considers how secretiveness about the benefits a graduate might expect might fall foul of trading regulations
Dame Minouche Shafik will be the first woman to head institution on a permanent basis in its 126-year history
Cambridge, UUK and Russell Group voice strong opposition to parts of plan for new Office for Students in England
Head of Russell Group university to retire after 30 years at the institution
Eight scientists share the secrets of being a successful principal investigator
As Ipswich institution gains independence, Richard Lister says it is ‘absolutely right’ that new providers go through ‘proper level of scrutiny’
Are alternative income streams out there? Keith Burnett mulls all the options and the impact of Brexit in a marketised system
Lacking insight and seeking only enrichment, search firms deliver obvious, uninspiring candidates, argues a business school professor
International group plans new institution run by staff and students
Analysis of THE World University Rankings data shows gender gap at top is gradually narrowing
Matthew Reisz discovers that campuses in August may be a frenzied whirlwind of activity
Frank Furedi says the mournful mood on campus and the disparagement and silencing of Leave supporters betray an isolated scholarly class
Three professors give their views on the difficulties of taking on tasks that are necessary but undervalued
Too often universities are not speaking early enough with private accommodation providers on what types of provision are needed, a conference hears
By limiting its scope and eschewing academic departments, a campus in Latin America has left room for tradition and transformation, says Klaus Capelle
Swansea takes top honour at annual Times Higher Education Leadership and Management Awards while Nottingham Trent scoops two
Shanghai Jiao Tong University a model of how China’s universities can transform and put innovation first, says president
Vice-chancellor to leave in September 2017 after 15 years at helm
President of George Washington University also questions the benefit of free university tuition
The former head of the American University in Cairo, Lisa Anderson, tells Chris Havergal how it carried on and kept students and staff safe without limiting free speech
Myra Strober’s rejection in 1970 for a tenure-track position inspired a lifetime of struggle against sexism
The Office for Students will kill off institutional autonomy, says Geoffrey Alderman, and the sector has only itself to blame
Tim Blackman’s vision of higher education for the 21st century is one in which students of varying abilities learn successfully together
Vice-chancellors have again come in for flak over what they are paid. We look at how their compensation packages compare with those of their international peers. Jack Grove runs the numbers
Fred Inglis on the fate of the academy in an era of calm-voiced propaganda and disgusting new shapes of intellectual life