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
ߣߣÊÓƵn universities are nervous about how governments, students and their own academics will react to new legal curbs on ¡®foreign influence¡¯, says Dean Forbes
Matthew Reisz meets Andrea Pet?, recent recipient of the Madame de Sta?l prize, a scholar at Hungary¡¯s Central European University whose feminist probing into the dark corners of Hungary¡¯s past is provoking strong reactions in the ¡®illiberal democracy¡¯
He may once have disdained older scholars, but, having reached seniority in a managerialist age, John Brinnamoor now values their ability to say what others can¡¯t
In a world transformed, we need a radical new blueprint ¨C for a flexible, less centralised network of scholars and students, says a former Berkeley chancellor
The age-old dispute over Western civilisation courses has bubbled up again in ߣߣÊÓƵ. It could do more harm than good to cash-strapped humanities courses, writes Steven Schwartz
Scholars say European Union may be reluctant to allocate research funds to Hungarian universities after government takes control over financing of research institutions
Treating staff and students like children discourages the kind of experimentation that will yield solutions to the challenges we face, says Frank Furedi
Moral and cultural organisations such as universities must strive harder to rid the body politic of populist infection, in central Europe and elsewhere, says Tom¨¢? Hal¨ªk
As a Brit leading HKU, Peter Mathieson had no baggage. The University of Edinburgh¡¯s new v-c tells Ellie Bothwell about academic freedom, internationalisation and being treated to taxi drivers¡¯ views on students
Gathering intellectual antagonists under the same roof contains the incendiary electricity of controversy and redirects it to generate sparks of new knowledge, says Carel Stolker
It was at a Munich university that a group of students formed a non-violent movement to resist the Nazi regime. Their courageous idealism sets an example that, Kenneth Asch hopes, continues to flower on campuses
Politicians¡¯ disparagement of historian¡¯s research signals that alternative interpretations of the city state¡¯s past will not be tolerated, says Linda Lim