European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen steps up efforts to attract American academics while taking aim at Trump¡¯s ¡®miscalculation¡¯ of failing to support research
Innovation cluster, new medical school and cautious growth of non-local student numbers high on the agenda of president of leading Hong Kong research university
Concerns framework programme¡¯s budget could be redirected to back projects with military uses ¡®threatens to undermine its core purpose¡¯, say leading research universities
China¡¯s Double First-Class project appears to be paying off as the country¡¯s institutions continue to lead the rankings. Why have similar schemes elsewhere struggled to reap rewards, and can China keep advancing despite economic slowdown and an ageing population? Helen Packer reports
Growing spending on research and development in Global South leading to more papers, but increased scrutiny needed to identify misconduct, say publishers
Sweeping cuts to USAID and the NIH have stranded the numerous overseas research groups in the Global South that relied on their funding. With scepticism already mounting that the SDGs will be met by 2030, the devastation of relevant research is another body blow. Jack Grove reports
91ÇÑ×Ó of prestigious awards hopes to claim more of its own after launching new funding stream ¨C but leaders caution against too much political control
Efforts to rationalise complex web of English local authorities ¨C and hand them more powers ¨C seen as a way of creating potentially strong partners for institutions looking to innovate locally
Discussions about the shape of the next framework programme, due to begin in 2028, are already under way. But the European Commission¡¯s deafening silence is stoking fears that it wants to refocus research funding on short-term industrial competitiveness. Emily Dixon reports
While newcomer and frontrunner Mark Carney might be expected to back innovation funding, academics do not expect a loosening of student migration rules any time soon
Rules designed for adversaries do not help against friends, expert warns, as US grills Australian researchers on DEI, ¡®environmental justice¡¯, ¡®gender ideology¡¯ and China links
Tropical disease researcher and parliamentarian Lauren Sullivan talks about difficulties of returning to the lab after a career break, juggling family, science and politics, and why Dundee¡¯s life science sector must be supported
The value of the UK¡¯s research block grants has fallen significantly since 2010, as policymakers have focused funding upticks on projects with compelling narratives. And in a tough financial climate, there are widespread fears that the trend could continue. Jack Grove examines what would be lost if it does
The administration¡¯s hostile edicts on DEI and science funding are sending shock waves through the US¡¯ world-leading higher education system. Here, we present five takes on what is unfolding
Arriving from outside academia means UK Research and Innovation¡¯s new chief executive is more willing to take unorthodox but correct strategic decisions, say scientists