#DearSam: UK HE sector tells new minister Sam Gyimah what his priorities should be
Chris Parr looks at the issues that THE's Twitter followers think the new universities minister should be tackling
Chris Parr looks at the issues that THE's Twitter followers think the new universities minister should be tackling
The good, the bad and the offbeat: the academy through the lens of the world’s media
A defence of non-academic university leaders fails to make the grade, says Amanda H. Goodall
Outrage over vice-chancellors’ remuneration has focused on individuals – but the buck stops with governors
Last week, the UK’s universities minister threatened to fine institutions that pay their v-cs more than the prime minister without a strong justification. We present three perspectives on the debate?
Michael Farthing’s ‘golden goodbye’ likely to intensify calls for inquiry into ‘excessive’ vice-chancellor pay
The leading lawyer and wife of the former British prime minister on why she applied to the LSE over Oxbridge, tuition fees and the importance of international students
University leaders?can expect renewed criticism over their salaries and ‘outdated’ benefits, warn governance experts
Remuneration committees should pay less attention to other institutions when setting their leaders’ pay, says Nick Hillman
The success of the student boycott of the National Student Survey is not necessarily a success for students, writes Andrew McRae?
Our annual pay review details v-cs’ remuneration, explores the make-up and workings of the governing bodies that set it, and compares the rewards on offer with those of other sectors
Our annual pay review details v-cs’ remuneration, explores the make-up and workings of the governing bodies that set it, and compares the rewards on offer with those of other sectors
Amid fresh criticism of executive remuneration, perhaps universities need to rethink the issue of vice-chancellors’ salaries
Simon Marginson looks ahead at what 2018 has in store for academia in the UK and further afield?
Sally Hunt says new London Economics analysis of loan repayments has exposed the lie that student funding is progressive