The West must recognise unofficial degrees from authoritarian countries
Victims of oppression often have to study informally; they should not be barred from pursuing an overseas master’s, say Natasha Robinson and David Mills
Victims of oppression often have to study informally; they should not be barred from pursuing an overseas master’s, say Natasha Robinson and David Mills
Beijing has given green light for international students’ return but some institutions say learners will have to wait until 2023
Embassies in dozens of countries now accepting visa applications, but many students still in the dark over anticipated move
Modern institutions get millions more in quality-related grants, in first allocations to use 2021 REF results
As enrolments rebound after Covid, students from biggest African nation found to face tougher conditions on testing, financing, visas and admissions
Leap into advanced cloud-based system doubles in single year, though big costs and complications still leave larger institutions on the sidelines
Special intake should be at least doubled, vice-chancellor says
Cutting-edge facilities are welcome but they achieve little without people to run them, science advocates point out
Flagship campus resumes full autumn admissions plans after legislature exempts it from environmental ruling, but promises fixes to housing crisis
With relief now unlikely before this month’s autumn admissions offers, top US campus talks of online and deferred acceptances
Move by historically black Paul Quinn College aims to break generational persistence of poverty
The Augar response highlights ministers’ hopes that rising costs will make certain courses economically unviable, says Alexis Brown
Westminster government unveils major student finance changes creating ‘more sustainable’ system, as sector voices concern on minimum entry bar plan
City residents fighting student overcrowding win order that would slice planned freshmen class by a third
Government promises response to review’s other recommendations ‘in due course’