Conservative Party’s higher education policy still likely to be dominated by focus on supposed low-value courses regardless of who wins leadership election
Shock results in July’s general election mean there are many more academics in parliament, but narrow majorities are just one reason why their constituencies are likely to be their main focus
Structurally disadvantaged in teaching Australian students, new private colleges face international enrolment veto until they have taught domestic students
University funding across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland ‘consistently unstable’ despite policy divergence since devolution, report highlights
The party behind the UK’s 50 per cent target is back in power but, while it still pledges commitment to equality of opportunity, it’s not clear what role – if any – universities will play in achieving this mission
Providing skills, creating opportunity and training the teachers and nurses the UK needs: modern universities stand ready to deliver, says Rachel Hewitt
One of the advantages of a large majority is that there is more generous political cover for experts brought into ministerial roles, says David Willetts
While turnout fell in seats where large numbers of students live during term time, Labour was able to weather this, and may have benefited from their votes back at home
As the UK votes in a general election, universities hope for a change of approach. In return, they must deliver for a country facing a host of problems
Proposal an improvement on current ‘blunt tools’ that undermine policy and facilitate exploitation, says Australian Labor MP and former international education boss