Chinese students let guard down against Covid-19 after jabs Continued efforts to communicate importance of protective behaviour is vital, say researchers By Jing Liu 9 October
University of Hong Kong wants Tiananmen ‘Pillar of Shame’ gone Push to remove statue ‘can be seen as final stage of mainlandising’ Hong Kong’s campuses By Pola Lem 8 October
Pandemic-hit IELTS English language test rolls out at-home exams Move offers alternative to testing centres used by thousands of international students to enter Western universities By Pola Lem 5 October
Efforts to support female academics in China struggle to take off Just a handful of applicants for national project tackling issue By Jing Liu 5 October
Is Western academia keeping up with Asia’s rise? In the third decade of the so-called Asian century, European and North American universities and governments continue to neglect the world’s most populous continent. As Asia grows ever more powerful, this must change, scholars tell Joyce Lau By Joyce Lau 30 September
Nottingham rebuked for ‘misleading’ students over China campus Official censure comes amid claims that pioneering institution is only ‘a Chinese college that bears Nottingham’s name’ By Jack Grove 29 September
Fake peer review retractions fuel concerns over Chinese practices Prestigious Sage robotics title pulls papers over concerns its peer review was ‘subverted’ by China-based academics By Jack Grove 28 September
Yale-NUS guarantees impossible to fulfil, academics claim University ‘keen to engage’ staff and students on ‘merger’, while sidestepping inconsistencies in proposal By John Ross 27 September
China takes on big publishers with ‘world-class’ journal drive Country concerned about likes of Elsevier ‘seizing’ distribution of scientific output By Jing Liu 26 September
After Yale-NUS closure, liberal arts in Asia will benefit from peer support A new consortium will embody the spread of liberal arts beyond the West, say Bryan Penprase and Thomas Schneider By Bryan Penprase 23 September
‘Kowtowing v-cs’ denounced by former Malaysian education minister University leaders would not exercise freedom even if the state did not have them under its thumb, says Maszlee Malik By John Ross 20 September
Chinese province tries speed dating to retain graduates Anhui launches ‘marriage assistance project’ in response to concerns that too many graduates are going elsewhere By Jing Liu 19 September