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14 votes
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Remembering May 4 (Kent State massacre) - An interview with Devo's Jerry Casale
16 votes -
An American education: Notes from UATX
4 votes -
Before I reach my enemy, bring me some heads
12 votes -
Finnish astronomers acquitted in defamation case related to protesting harassment – astrophysicist Christian Ott argued protests cost him postdoc position
5 votes -
My students cheated... a lot
27 votes -
Edinburgh Philosophy – Voices on Hume
3 votes -
Is the University of Edinburgh right to rename its David Hume Tower?
9 votes -
The coming disruption - Scott Galloway predicts a handful of elite universities and tech companies will soon monopolize higher education
6 votes -
An Oxford professor, an evangelical collector, and a missing gospel of Mark: A scholar claimed that he discovered a first-century gospel fragment, now faces allegations of theft, cover-up, and fraud
11 votes -
How a leftist cartoonist’s college campus drawing nearly became a far-right meme
6 votes -
Biden’s free-college plan is a solution in search of a problem
6 votes -
A scandal in Oxford: The curious case of the stolen gospel
7 votes -
One in five University of Otago, New Zealand medical students to be denied graduation after falsifying overseas placement records
6 votes -
In China, surge in students informing on professors
8 votes -
China orders halt to history tests for students seeking credits for US university courses
9 votes -
The disadvantages of an elite education: Our best universities have forgotten that the reason they exist is to make minds, not careers
16 votes -
A union fight at Marquette University
6 votes -
Can you access university libraries in your country w/o an affiliation to the university?
In Turkey, where I live, almost all universities restrict access to staff and students (only their own students if not a graduate student); the only exception I can find is the Koç University...
In Turkey, where I live, almost all universities restrict access to staff and students (only their own students if not a graduate student); the only exception I can find is the Koç University where paid membership is open to public. I've researched in the past and found that major universities around the world---i.e. Italy, France, UK, US; selection factor being the languages I can read---seem to allow the public to access in one way or another (article, in Turkish, with results). But I wonder how accurate my reading is with the reality, and thus I'm asking this question.
So, as a plain citizen w/o any current affiliation to any educational institutions, can you access university libraries where you live? Does it matter if you have certain diplomas or affiliations? How easy it is?
10 votes -
Harvard sued by 'descendant of slave for profiting from photos'
7 votes -
Academic grievance studies and the corruption of scholarship
11 votes -
The other political correctness: America's elite universities are censoring themselves on China
11 votes -
How two thieves stole thousands of prints from university libraries
5 votes -
After a year of rising tensions, protesters tear down Confederate statue on UNC campus
27 votes -
How in 2015, $364 Billion flowed through two and four year public universities and colleges of the states of the USA
4 votes -
The world might be better off without college for everyone
12 votes