Iranian protests gain momentum as students demand ‘revolution’ It’s the ‘start of a revolution’, students chant in third week of protests By Pola Lem 5 October
Can Japan’s ¥10 trillion excellence drive transform its research? Scholars warn that Tokyo’s cash injection will reward the few over the many, pushing top institutions closer to industry at the expense of basic research, social sciences and humanities By Pola Lem 4 October
Iranian universities brace for ‘purges’ as protests spread Academics believe regime is ‘unlikely’ to silence ‘spirit of opposition’ gaining momentum across hundreds of campuses By Pola Lem 3 October
KAIST departs from branch campus plan to join forces with NYU Top Korean institution announces change of direction for its first venture into the US By Pola Lem 2 October
Soochow and Stanford professors win Yidan prizes Founder of China’s New Education Initiative will use award money to expand programme’s reach to rural areas By Pola Lem 29 September
Chevening scholars call on UK to reinstate Afghan programme Closure mirrored US government decision to suspend Fulbright programme to Afghanistan, which it subsequently reversed By Pola Lem 28 September
Chinese graduates lose taste for entrepreneurship University leavers becoming ‘more rational’ as country’s economy cools By Jing Liu 28 September
Chinese universities must respond to rising graduate unemployment The economic downturn is beyond their control, but degree programmes could be better tailored to industrial need, says Wu Keming By Wu Keming 25 September
Taiwanese universities ‘may fall short’ of 2030 bilingual goal Some students reluctant to switch to English-language lectures because national exams are conducted in Chinese By Pola Lem 22 September
‘Secret shower videos’ force Indian university’s week-long closure Student groups condemn institution’s denials and call for ‘student-run’ body to look into sexual harassment on campus By Pola Lem 20 September
Kuniko Tanioka: being a female leader in Japan Shigakkan University president talks about being the odd one out in an ‘old boys’ club’ and about encouraging her students to carve their own path By Pola Lem 20 September
Asia tipped to follow US lead with open access mandates Eastern authors ‘risk falling behind’ on visibility and rankings if their work remains behind paywall while US moves to open research, scholars warn By Pola Lem 15 September