Filter & Sort

International Enrollments Begin to Recover
Colleges report a 68 percent surge in new international students enrolled this fall, following steep pandemic-related drops last year. The Open Doors survey also tracks the pandemic’s effect on study abroad.

Brazilian Science in Danger
President cuts federal science budget by 90 percent. Researchers fear a brain drain.

Japan to Welcome Back International Students
Students and technical interns make up 70 percent of the 370,000 foreigners waiting for the border to reopen.

A Retreat From China Collaborations in the Face of U.S. Scrutiny
About half of Chinese scientists at U.S. universities report concerns about being surveilled by the U.S. government. Survey finds evidence that fears about a China-focused Department of Justice initiative to combat trade-secret theft may be harming American science.

Taiwan’s Alternative to Confucius Institutes
Experts say program has a good chance of succeeding -- provided it steers clear of politics.

New Law Threatens International Recruiting Model
A ban on incentive-based recruitment could have big implications for how colleges recruit international students.

Academics Fear New Law in Singapore
Government will be authorized to investigate and obstruct “hostile information campaigns.”

Persecution of Mexican Researchers Reaches ‘Another Level’
Government is attempting to bring charges against 31 scholars.
Pagination
Pagination
- 43
- /
- 209