A year ago the potential impact of COVID-19 on precarious early career researchers (ECRs) looked bleak. Reporting on findings from the longitudinal Harbingers 2 project, David Nicholas suggests the effects of COVID-19 on ECR researchers have been varied internationally. Where pressures from the pandemic have been felt most acutely, particularly in the UK, US and France, it has often aligned with perceptions of ongoing structural issues within academia
COVID-19 has led to rapid and open sharing of research outputs. But will this new, radically open re...
Failure is an inevitable part of any academic career. This may feel especially true for those resear...
Whilst the COVID-19 pandemic promoted faster and more open research practices, it also revealed ongo...
Early career researchers have both been the most directly effected by the COVID-19 pandemic and resp...
While getting new information on COVID-19 is essential, not all research will be critical to managin...
The pandemic’s effects on our ways of working are widely discussed. But the impact it has had on car...
AI is forecast to become increasingly central to many aspects of life and work. The same trends can ...
Did the educational background of world leaders make a difference to responses to the Covid-19 pande...
The COVID-19 lockdown has rapidly and radically changed academic life, disrupting the normal pattern...
Taking stock of what Plan S – a funder led initiative to deliver widespread open access to research ...
Much academic research is currently characterised by a rush to capture the effects of COVID-19. Howe...
A predicted exodus of EU academics from UK universities has not yet materialised. Helen de Cruz disc...
What does the future hold for PhD graduates? Marie-Alix Thouaille has found that for many the post-P...
© 2017, © 2017 Society for Research into Higher Education. Findings from interviews with mid-career ...
Changing course as a PhD student is hardly uncommon. However, during a crisis, the temptation to res...
COVID-19 has led to rapid and open sharing of research outputs. But will this new, radically open re...
Failure is an inevitable part of any academic career. This may feel especially true for those resear...
Whilst the COVID-19 pandemic promoted faster and more open research practices, it also revealed ongo...
Early career researchers have both been the most directly effected by the COVID-19 pandemic and resp...
While getting new information on COVID-19 is essential, not all research will be critical to managin...
The pandemic’s effects on our ways of working are widely discussed. But the impact it has had on car...
AI is forecast to become increasingly central to many aspects of life and work. The same trends can ...
Did the educational background of world leaders make a difference to responses to the Covid-19 pande...
The COVID-19 lockdown has rapidly and radically changed academic life, disrupting the normal pattern...
Taking stock of what Plan S – a funder led initiative to deliver widespread open access to research ...
Much academic research is currently characterised by a rush to capture the effects of COVID-19. Howe...
A predicted exodus of EU academics from UK universities has not yet materialised. Helen de Cruz disc...
What does the future hold for PhD graduates? Marie-Alix Thouaille has found that for many the post-P...
© 2017, © 2017 Society for Research into Higher Education. Findings from interviews with mid-career ...
Changing course as a PhD student is hardly uncommon. However, during a crisis, the temptation to res...
COVID-19 has led to rapid and open sharing of research outputs. But will this new, radically open re...
Failure is an inevitable part of any academic career. This may feel especially true for those resear...
Whilst the COVID-19 pandemic promoted faster and more open research practices, it also revealed ongo...