NEWS – Our correspondents worldwide report

CHILE
Students and rectors oppose state university reforms
María Elena Hurtado
The state universities bill, now in Parliament, introduces changes to their governance, institutional system, rules of employment for academics and non-academics and government financing. But it has come under heavy criticism from students and rectors of the same universities it is supposed to back.
CHINA
CUP reverses China censorship after academic uproar
Yojana Sharma
Cambridge University Press or CUP has reversed its decision to block access in China to more than 300 articles deemed sensitive to the Beijing government after China specialists and academics condemned its decision, made public earlier this month, to cave into pressure from China.
UNITED KINGDOM
Pressure rises to take students out of migration target
Brendan O'Malley
The prime minister is under mounting pressure to remove international students from the target of cutting immigration from hundreds of thousands to tens of thousands a year following the release of new figures showing that nearly all students leave the country on time.
GERMANY
HE funding, tuition fees pushed in federal elections
Michael Gardner
Research spending and higher education funding are on the agenda for the September federal elections, with the Free Democratic Party pushing for fairer funding for universities and tuition fees paid after graduation in what is likely to become a coalition government.
NIGERIA
National agency partners with academia to fight corruption
Jackie Opara
The country’s anti-corruption agency is partnering with the National Universities Commission to sponsor 20 doctoral theses engaging with anti-corruption issues over the next 10 years and to introduce an anti-corruption course for all students at undergraduate level.
SWEDEN
International students face residency clampdown
Jan Petter Myklebust
The Swedish Migration Agency has rejected more than 10 residence permits for international students admitted for a study place and grants at Swedish universities, claiming they have not adequately demonstrated that their primary aim for coming to Sweden is to study.
UNITED STATES
The reckoning begins at university in racism storm
Nell Gluckman, The Chronicle of Higher Education
The University of Virginia, site of the white supremacist rally and clashes that ignited a nationwide debate about race hate and free speech, is pondering how it could have done more to support its students or even stem a tragedy, and how to move forward.
NORTH AFRICA
Countries lag in ‘disability-friendly’ campus movement
Wagdy Sawahel
The poor participation in university education in Morocco by young people with disabilities has been highlighted in a recent report presented to the United Nations.
COMMENTARY

SOUTH AFRICA
As by Fire – The end of the South African university
Jonathan Jansen
My book As by Fire: The end of the South African university warns against the new normal of violence and disruption on campuses, the closing down of space for dissent by the dominant (though not majority) student voice, and the kinds of pressures – including chronic instability and under-funding – that levelled the most promising post-colonial universities elsewhere in Africa. The book tries to push back against what some already see as inevitable.
UNITED KINGDOM
Put UK universities at the centre of free trade deals
Ludovic Highman
United Kingdom universities post-Brexit need to carve for themselves a more proactive role at the centre of new free trade agreements in the competitive higher education market and position themselves as gateways to their regions, through greater public engagement and links with local business and industry.
LATIN AMERICA-UNITED KINGDOM
How can Latin America-UK HE ties develop post-Brexit?
Valesca Lima
Brexit will make it harder to promote higher education exchanges and cooperation between Latin America and the United Kingdom. But bilateral initiatives show that the UK’s exit from the European Union should be seen not only as a threat, but also as an opportunity.
SYRIA
Culture clash – National vs international publishing
Rami Ayoubi and Hiba Massoud
Syria has continued its policy of sending postgraduate students to study in the West, despite the current conflict. This has boosted its international publications, but created tensions between those academics schooled in publishing nationally in Arabic and those publishing in English internationally.
GLOBAL
Learning to learn could be built into online courses
Sandra Milligan
A study of more than 100,000 online learners finds that learning involves being prepared to take a risk, engaging with peers and having an independent streak – and teaching students how best to learn could be built into online programmes.
LATIN AMERICA
Uneven development leaves private institutions on top
Angel Calderon
The recent Times Higher Education ranking of Latin American universities shows that there is still a large gap between institutions in the region, and highlights the impact of under-investment in public higher education and the consequent dominance of private universities.
WORLD BLOG

GLOBAL
Inclusive higher education must cater for refugees
Patrick Blessinger and Enakshi Sengupta
In an era of increasing political instability, xenophobia, racism, religious and ethnic persecution, genocide and other threats to democracy and human rights, education, civic and other leaders should do more to ensure refugees have access to education, including higher education.
ACADEMIC FREEDOM

GLOBAL
Universities must stand up to Chinese censorship
Bruce Macfarlane
Universities need to demonstrate their founding principles in the way they deal with naked attempts by China to shut down debate and academic freedom – as the storm over Cambridge University Press’s recent withdrawal of articles on sensitive subjects highlights.
FEATURES

JAPAN
Investigation into motives behind science misconduct
Suvendrini Kakuchi
In the wake of recent scandals over dubious data, leading to retractions of research papers from prestigious journals, Japan is carrying out broader investigations into what drives researchers to engage in misconduct in scientific research, with a view to preventing such behaviours.
AFRICA
New academy leader champions the power of science
Stephen Coan
“There is good science in Africa,” said Professor Nelson Torto, the newly appointed executive director of the African Academy of Sciences' Governing Council. “My only concern is that it might not be necessarily focused on the current needs and that is really something that requires debate and understanding.”