The Human Body in the Age of Catastrophe: Brittleness, Integration, Science, and the Great War, by Stefanos Geroulanos and Todd Meyers
Book of the week: the horrific mutilations of wartime provided fertile ground for research, writes Linda Maynard

Book of the week: the horrific mutilations of wartime provided fertile ground for research, writes Linda Maynard

Far from being hotbeds of intellectual debate, universities enforce ideological conformity, follow rigid procedures and offer little that enthusiasts could not teach themselves. It is time for...
Sector fails to self-regulate its 鈥榳icked issues鈥 The article on the Office for Students (鈥溾楺uick with the rod鈥, but is the OfS up to the job?鈥, News, 24 January) identifies the inbuilt tension...

The idea of mistakes being intrinsic to success has become an educational mantra 鈥 but for many students and academics, messing up is not an option

Funding councils acknowledge that policy U-turn may have 'unintended consequences for individuals'

Tributes paid to historian who transformed our understanding of early modern England

The architect of Plan S tells of his next move to become a university leader in Eindhoven and discusses the art of not taking life too seriously

While China鈥檚 intensification puts regional rivals in the shade, it casts a spotlight on progress in the special administrative region

Christopher Hunt shared row with precious remains after granting of 鈥榩assport鈥

Universities and scholars told to establish 鈥榯he聽boundaries of acceptable speech鈥 as staff report meetings with managers over online activities

The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world鈥檚 media

The next phase of the research excellence framework will聽address individuals鈥 abilities to contribute to research output and endeavour to promote equality and diversity throughout, writes Dianne...

Ucas data show that, at three institutions, three-quarters of all offers made to applicants were unconditional