Women, Writing, and Religion in England and Beyond, 650-1100, by Diane Watt
Hetta Howes is impressed by a bold attempt to recover the words of long-forgotten women

Hetta Howes is impressed by a bold attempt to recover the words of long-forgotten women

Brave researchers who challenge powerful interests and angry activists cannot be left to fight alone: colleagues and institutions must support them

A look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewersÂ

Figures mark end of trend that has seen the share of students gaining the top degree class double since 2009-10

Cait MacPhee enjoys an Antipodean analysis of the ‘heritage’ generated by space travel

Charlotte Jones enjoys an account of a hugely ambitious writer who challenges many of our assumptions about studying literatureÂ

The Foulkes Foundation Medal-winning immunologist on open science, adjusting to the UK climate and why women scientists still face bias

Book of the week: there’s something for everyone in this provocative study of sex, power and conflict, says Joanna Lewis

Like the rest of society, universities have largely failed to consider the specific needs of menopausal women. Here, one scholar describes how this can lead to marginalisation and bullying – and why...

IE University in Madrid wanted to grow so, in a crowded city, it decided to build upwards

Tributes paid to a pioneering scholar who helped ‘push the boundaries of how we think and feel theologically to address the needs of the world’

Gender quotas have improved female representation on internal panels, but researchers have highlighted that the loss of research time slows career progression

Just 5 per cent of funding over past two decades went on studies examining how to change human behaviour to help tackle crisis, researchers find

Participation in assessment likely to be a condition of receiving Research England funding from 2020-21

Catholic institution hires TEQSA chief executive who led QAA and Ucas