General election 2015: which way are your university's staff likely to vote? We drill down into our election survey of the higher education sector for a clue By John Morgan 5 May
Vote? Why bother? In this general election, visiting the polling station seems more pointless than ever, says Felipe?Fernández-Armesto 30 April
New EUA president will ‘speak up’ to Brussels Rolf Tarrach, incoming head of the 850-strong EUA, is also keen to maintain and expand its UK membership By Holly Else 30 April
Almost half of sector to back Labour, THE election poll suggests Our survey of university employees reveals the electoral intentions of a campus cohort with real impact By John Morgan 30 April
Corruption claim hits Rio university Commercial links are transparent, says sector body. Donna Bowater in Rio de Janeiro writes By Donna Bowater 30 April
Campaign tales: on the doorstep with an academic candidate Three scholars with their sights set on Westminster explain what drives them to aspire to a career in?politics By Jack Grove 30 April
Post-election scenarios assessed Whoever wins or holds the balance of power, senior sector figures see risks ahead for higher education funding, fees and policy By John Morgan 30 April
Labour and Tories not backing up ‘warm words’ on science The two main parties’ manifestos have a mismatch between rhetoric and commitment to investment in science and engineering, an analysis has suggested. By Holly Else 27 April
Lower fees would mean different course choices, say students About 40 per cent of university applicants might choose a different course if tuition fees were reduced to ?6,000 a year, a new study suggests By Jack Grove 25 April
Labour ?6K fees policy ‘not incredibly sensible’, says IFS expert Education election briefing also hears claims that coalition’s private colleges policy was ‘completely mad’ By John Morgan 24 April
Labour’s manifesto plans: not perfect, but not bad Danny Dorling looks at what the party’s promises would mean for higher education 23 April
?6K fees more likely as SNP backs plan that would boost Barnett cash Scottish National Party manifesto confirms party would support lower fees in England By Chris Havergal 23 April
Cambridge v-c warns Brexit would isolate UK researchers Sir Leszek Borysiewicz says that universities would lose hundreds of millions of pounds a year in EU funding By Jack Grove 23 April
Question time: THE election panel grill the politicians Higher education figures interrogate the main parties on subjects from policy mistakes to part-time study 23 April
SNP to back lower tuition fees in England The Scottish National Party has pledged to support Labour’s proposed reduction of tuition fees in England to ?6,000. By Chris Havergal 20 April
'Payback time' as NUS attempts to unseat fee pledge breakers Thirty-six Lib Dems in firing line, including Nick Clegg, plus two Tories By John Morgan 16 April
Let’s make higher education an election issue In the workplace and at the ballot box, it is time to reject stale ideology, says Thomas Docherty 16 April
Manifestos focus on teaching, visas, fees and funds Tories talk of tougher visas and recognising top teaching. Labour alters funding plan for ?6K fees. Greens promise to abolish fees By John Morgan 16 April
Rhodes’ statue falls, but toxic legacies linger As the statue of Cecil Rhodes is removed from the University of Cape Town, South Africa’s academy still needs monumental change, says Martin Hall 16 April
Universities on track to miss carbon targets Universities in England are set to miss carbon emission reduction targets by half, a report has found By Chris Parr 15 April
Tory manifesto promises ‘framework on teaching quality’ Tougher student visa regime and more employment data for applicants also mooted By John Morgan 14 April
Greens commit to abolishing fees and student debt Manifesto says party would reintroduce block grant for universities By John Morgan 14 April
Labour alters funding proposal for fees plan Tax avoidance savings now part of measures to fund ?3K fees cut By John Morgan 13 April
Scottish universities attack governance bill Scotland’s universities have called on the Holyrood government to put on hold an overhaul of governance in the sector after the proposals met with significant resistance. By Chris Havergal 9 April
Labour plans to divert ?50 million from access Labour would use ?50 million from university access funds to guarantee face-to-face careers advice in schools. By Jack Grove 9 April
Interview: the “philosopher president” of Uruguay Martin McQuillan meets José Mujica to discuss education and philosophy 9 April
Student vote encouraged by online forum’s campaign The Student Room has launched a campaign to get its members to register to vote so they can affect results in marginal seats in the general election 8 April
Kenya attack highlights universities' vulnerability A deadly attack at a Kenyan university demonstrates that higher education institutions are a “soft target” for terrorists, campaigners have said. By Chris Havergal 2 April
Southampton cancels controversial Israel conference Move prompts organisers to seek legal action By Matthew Reisz 2 April
Academic guardians to keep watch over ‘Chinese Dream’ Beijing’s ‘messages’ to the academy focus on its role in promoting a crucial concept By John Morgan 2 April
Universities ‘worse than bankers’ Civil servant appeals for further savings to avoid another round of government cuts By Jack Grove 2 April
Green Party: we will write off student loan debts Policy proposal stands alongside a commitment to abolish tuition fees By John Morgan 2 April
Private colleges may face public fee cut While Labour could cap funding, the Lib Dems could support graduate tax By John Morgan 2 April
General election 2015: survey of university staff now open The 成人VR视频 general election survey is seeking the views of all UK higher education employees on the upcoming election By Chris Parr 1 April
Southampton conference on Israel ‘in doubt’ University looks at “withdrawing permission” for controversial event By Matthew Reisz 31 March
Sir David Greenaway to be next Russell Group chair The Russell Group’s next chair will be Sir David Greenaway, the University of Nottingham vice-chancellor By John Morgan 30 March
Science policies laid out ahead of general election The UK’s main political parties have laid out their plans for science just days before the official general election campaign kicks off By Holly Else 27 March
Consensus on net migration change, says MP Labour’s Paul Blomfield believes change could happen even if Tories lead government after general election By Jack Grove 26 March
The Spanish and Greek scholars thrust into national politics Martin McQuillan on the critical theorists shaking up Syriza and Podemos 26 March
Overseas students’ health surcharge is ‘full of loopholes’ A new “health surcharge” levied on international students from next month is “an election stunt full of loopholes”, a legal expert has claimed. By Jack Grove 20 March
Casualty of war: the hounding of German scholars in the UK Frank Finlay considers the experience of the immigrant professor who held his post during the 1914-18 conflict 19 March
Budget 2015: PhD loans up to ?25K announced George Osborne has announced that the government will offer PhD and research-based master’s students income-contingent loans of up to ?25,000 By John Morgan 18 March
Australian government's bid to uncap fees falls again Plans to uncap tuition fees in Australia have been defeated in the country’s upper house for the second time in four months By Paul Jump 17 March
University duty on ‘non-violent extremism’ not mentioned for Scotland Prevent document from government has different wording for English/Welsh universities By John Morgan 17 March
Ukip MEP: researchers being ‘taken advantage of’ Researchers are being “taken advantage of” and put up with very low wages and insecure careers. By Holly Else 13 March
Universities must assess risk of students becoming terrorists, says 成人VR视频 Office ‘Prevent’ guidance clarifies new legal duty on institutions to help tackle radicalisation By John Morgan 12 March
Tristram Hunt says universities face ‘elimination’ from teacher training But Nicky Morgan tells TES debate that schools route offers choice to students By John Morgan 12 March
Extremists targeted London campus of soldier killer University of Greenwich’s report following the murder of Fusilier Lee Rigby suggests the ‘area was a centre for radical Islamic movements’ By Jack Grove 12 March
BIS plans ‘reward structure’ as bill paves way for earnings league tables The Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Bill will enable ministers to join up datasets By John Morgan 12 March
Head of KAUST rejects calls to condemn restrictions on freedom of speech in Saudi Jean-Lou Chameau says universities must reflect the societies within which they exist By Chris Havergal 12 March
Teacher education and health manifestos launched by Million+ Universities must be put at the “heart of the teacher education system”, according to a new election policy manifesto. By John Elmes 11 March
Vince Cable: loss of polytechnics was a mistake The conversion of polytechnics into universities has been lamented as a “poor decision” by the business secretary By Chris Havergal 5 March
Flexible study emerges as cross-party concern Help for non-traditional learning wins support, with Greg Clark saying ‘watch this space’ By Chris Havergal 5 March
Fee-free study and v-c pay curbs are election priorities, says Green Party Greens unveil election goals but figures on cost of pledge on fees still pending By John Morgan 5 March
Access would get a ‘reboot’ under Labour, says Byrne Shadow minister explains that his party would aim for graduate tax but plans to leave numbers uncapped By John Morgan 5 March
Election hustings: Labour's ?6K fees pledge debated But Liam Byrne insists graduate tax is still ‘long-term policy’ for party By John Morgan 3 March
Labour pressed to reveal plans on student numbers Labour has been urged to say whether or not it would reintroduce caps on undergraduate numbers after unveiling its pledge to lower fees to ?6,000. By John Morgan 27 February
Miliband announces ?6K tuition fees pledge Ed Miliband has pledged that a Labour government would lower fees to ?6,000 and raise maintenance grants by ?400 By John Morgan 27 February
Mandelson warns Labour on ?6,000 fees A cut to tuition fees not coupled with a rise in taxpayer funding would damage universities, Lord Mandelson has said as Labour finalises its policy. By Jack Grove 20 February
Shut the front door! Fear of offending makes a pig’s ear of free speech, says Christopher Bigsby 19 February