The senior lecturer in financial risk management discusses his academic career around the world, his admiration for Galileo and how a traditional game inspired his love of mathematics
The departure of Claudine Gay from Harvard was said to be politically motivated but most other leaders have also fallen on their swords when their scholarship is questioned
Ewan Kirk, entrepreneur-in-residence at the University of Cambridge, says Westminster government is being driven by the madness of the immigration debate
Questions over whether King Charles doctor holds certain institutional roles increase need for more formalised way of handing out honorary titles, critics say
After affirmative action ban, campuses prod students to describe their personal backgrounds, without going so far as to potentially encourage legal action
While overseas students still flock to the UK for PhDs, concerns are growing over weakening domestic demand, a decline in UKRI-funded starters and whether universities can afford to train the next generation of researchers
Restrictions would increase registration fees for non-EU learners, but plans to make international students pay returnable deposits for residence are already in doubt
With Claudine Gay accepting debatable instances of plagiarism as final straw, faculty see odds getting hopeless for countering unified political and economic power
After brief pause to assess security, Birthright programme again gives Jewish students free tours of nation, but faces questions over limited Palestinian perspective
The biographer of the first black American woman to study at Oxford discusses life in segregated schools in the South, why affirmative action still matters and election-style efforts to unseat Harvard president Claudine Gay