We prove that any graph G of minimum degree greater than 2k2−1 has a
(k+1)-connected induced subgraph H such that the number of vertices of H
that have neighbors outside of H is at most 2k2−1. This generalizes a
classical result of Mader, which states that a high minimum degree implies the
existence of a highly connected subgraph. We give several variants of our
result, and for each of these variants, we give asymptotics for the bounds. We
also we compute optimal values for the case when k=2. Alon, Kleitman, Saks,
Seymour, and Thomassen proved that in a graph of high chromatic number, there
exists an induced subgraph of high connectivity and high chromatic number. We
give a new proof of this theorem with a better bound