Rules designed for adversaries do not help against friends, expert warns, as US grills Australian researchers on DEI, &environmental justice*, &gender ideology* and China links
Tropical disease researcher and parliamentarian Lauren Sullivan talks about difficulties of returning to the lab after a career break, juggling family, science and politics, and why Dundee*s life science sector must be supported
The value of the UK*s research block grants has fallen significantly since 2010, as policymakers have focused funding upticks on projects with compelling narratives. And in a tough financial climate, there are widespread fears that the trend could continue. Jack Grove examines what would be lost if it does
Raging against the &woke elites* running US universities won*t help the millions of Americans who lack decent, family-sustaining jobs, says John Austin
Party*s renewed focus on winning back support of those who have not gone to college provides little incentive to defend higher education from Trumpian attacks, experts say
With its Trump-style promise to smash woke ideology on campus, Germany*s far-right populist party is widely seen as a threat by academics. And with even the country*s mainstream parties promising little for higher education or research, few are relishing Sunday*s election. Emily Dixon reports
Controversial department temporarily loses ability to see private loan information after what has been described as &one of the biggest data hacks in US history*
Repeat of UK debate looms, as parliamentary committee urges Australian universities to &align* with IHRA definition, and opposition members say it should be mandatory
Science minister tells Commons committee that he is more interested in maximising impact of science spending than increasing total outlay, as he emphasises need to get visa policies &right*
US colleges and universities that predominantly serve underrepresented students don*t know where they stand amid new president*s sweeping executive orders