William Dalzell, 1936-2021
Tributes paid to lecturer who pushed his students to be ¡®true detectives¡¯ in helping companies solve their problems
Tributes paid to lecturer who pushed his students to be ¡®true detectives¡¯ in helping companies solve their problems
Wave of money is ¡®truly unprecedented¡¯, says Italian rectors¡¯ head, but some worry the money is too focused on technology transfer and that national plans overlap
Your new manager likely?doesn¡¯t have a PhD, and she¡¯s higher on the food chain because experience is more valued than a doctorate, says Janelle Ward
Report author says increasing funding would only lead to more insecurity, and culture shift is needed instead
Talking to lab members is not very revealing when they are habituated into an abusive culture, says Joana Vieira
Recent examples explore everything from radical vaudeville to the legacy of slavery
Scientific leaders and politicians have embraced calls to reduce the stress and precarity faced by researchers. Jack Grove examines some radical proposals
Recent cuts and scares have cast doubt on ministers¡¯ commitment to harnessing science in pursuit of a levelled-up, post-Brexit innovation economy. Questions also remain about how funding should be...
THE event hears benefits of emulating Bologna Process would be huge, but efforts might need to start small
Webinar hears that postdocs are being ¡®deprofessionalised¡¯ and encouraged to?win grants on behalf of principal investigators
The focus of research evaluation on papers and grants excludes far too many vital contributions. We must change that, says Simon Hettrick
Academics are often unusual jobseekers with specific skills ? LinkedIn allows you to take control of your professional self-narrative, says Stacy Hartman
Covid-19 has prompted an explosion in preprints but has curtailed networking and underlined the extra pressures on women and junior academics. Simon Baker asks whether the pandemic era is a dark blip...
At the Future of Humanity Institute, early career researchers are given two years to work out which questions are really worth asking
Nearly half of all professors in the UK are now aged 55 or over