The advent of Plan S promises to turbocharge the open access movement, but amid pushback from researchers and publishers, Rachael Pells examines whether the demand for published research truly merits the disruption
A ban on political advocacy and remedial action for possession of &radical concepts* could undermine the special administrative region*s universities, says Michael O*Sullivan
Maintaining a breadth of curricular offerings is crucial if subjects outside the sciences are to retain their attraction in the digital age, says Dean Forbes
Australia*s twice-unlucky research grant applicants raise questions about the assessment process, but they could help elevate science as an election issue, says John Ross
Intimate teacher-student relationships must be off-limits even if consent is not an issue, says Agnieszka Piotrowska 每 who has personal experience of student vulnerability in such asymmetrical relationships
New rules requiring a female presence on doctoral defence panels at the University of Glasgow will push more &unrewarded* academic tasks on to women, critics claim
Since 2011, dozens of institutions have sworn not to undertake military-related research, but the country is now calling on academics to strengthen its defences