AI is helping us mine 200,000 stakeholders* ideas, sensible and silly, about core elements of the new Adelaide University, say Peter H?j and David Lloyd
The test aims to flag potential that school-leaving exams miss. But not all applicants to the hugely oversubscribed courses are cheering, says Brian Bloch
Unlocking potential will need huge injections of funding, proper devolution and the type of long-term planning that has long been absent, says Sue Hartley
The rise of antisemitism on campus is the inevitable consequence of leaders* failure to call out the Hamas atrocities for what they were, says Joseph Mintz
With helping students and graduates the likely priority, universities will have to make concessions for a share of any spare cash, says Jonathan Simons
The general secretary*s visibility makes her a natural target for discontent, but many of the blunders arose from committee decisions, says Dyfrig Jones
The Gaza situation is no exception to the rule that truth-seeking requires the marrying of free expression with inclusion and respect, says Duncan Ivison
As MENA adapts to global warming, regional universities, especially in the UAE, are preparing to embrace a climate leadership role, says Mari?t Westermann
Both boards approved the case for the amalgamated Adelaide University 每 but politicians still formed a scrutiny committee, say Peter H?j and David Lloyd
Academics could cooperate to decommercialise publishing so that all students have affordable access to reliable information, says Michael Wynn-Williams
As the cuts to the USS scheme are reversed, the UCU*s battle for better pay and conditions goes on. Members must vote &yes* to more action, says Jo Grady
Only offering discounts for publication in fully open access journals is limiting the options of researchers in lower-income countries, says Daniel Keirs
&The change* is finally starting to get the attention it deserves, but the issues go far beyond the medical field, say Joanne Ella Parsons and Ruth Heholt
The post-war scheme is 75 years old this year, but global conditions still cry out for inclusive international collaboration initiatives, says Maria Balinska
The challenge for universities seeking greater openness, innovation and collaboration is they can*t do it on their own, say Ian Matthias and Mike Boxall
We who are the beneficiaries of technology must also listen and respond to the voices of frustration if science is to regain public trust, says Keith Burnett