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Boulay, Jennifer – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Women comprise the majority of both the college-educated workforce (Fry, 2019) and higher education professionals (Silbert & Dube, 2021), yet a proverbial glass ceiling remains intact for female leaders within this industry (Bichsel & McChesney, 2017; DeFrank-Cole et al., 2014; Diehl & Dzubinski, 2016; Gagliardi et al., 2017;…
Descriptors: Leadership, Temporary Employment, Females, Higher Education
Brittany Nicole Philbert – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Colleges and universities appoint interim leaders to fill key leadership vacancies during periods of organizational transition and change. Although a widely accepted practice within higher education, there is limited literature related to the topic of interim leadership or on the experiences of those who navigate the role. Therefore, the purpose…
Descriptors: Temporary Employment, College Administration, Predominantly White Institutions, Women Administrators
Robson, James – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
Despite the fact that precarious modes of employment have become increasingly common in academic careers, studies have shown that precarious contracts are often hidden and masked within higher education structures. This has important implications for the identities of those on such contracts. This paper uses Goffman's work on stigma, 'spoiled…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Temporary Employment, Adjunct Faculty
Leathwood, Carole; Read, Barbara – Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
The increasing casualisation of academic labour over recent years has been noted across the global north. In the UK, this takes a number of forms, including fixed term, hourly paid and zero hours contracts. What tends to characterise them all, however, is a focus on the short-term. In this paper, we draw on a qualitative study with 20 UK-based…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, College Faculty, Temporary Employment
Pedro Pineda; Diego Salazar Morales – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Through multilevel regression analysis, we examine the impact of managerialism, particularly accreditation practices, on the increasing job insecurity in universities. We find that universities that are accredited, private, secular or non-Catholic are more likely to offer insecure jobs, but that the relevance of these factors depends on each…
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Universities
Harris, Jess; Smithers, Kathleen; Spina, Nerida; Heffernan, Troy – Studies in Higher Education, 2023
Internationally, changes to university funding arrangements have put pressure on the workloads of tenured academic staff and increased the reliance on casual academics to backfill teaching and research positions. Limited research has focused on the effects of casualisation on research academics and the institutions in which they work. This paper…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Teacher Researchers, Faculty Workload
Kot, Victoria; Yemini, Miri – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
We examined perceptions of precarity in higher education by conducting interviews with a cohort of academics in Israel. The participants were 1.5 generation immigrants who were born in the former Soviet Union (FSU) and then moved to Israel as children or teenagers with their family, typically in the 1990s. Using a narrative research approach, we…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Neoliberalism, College Faculty
Walters, David; Zarifa, David; Etmanski, Brittany – Higher Education Policy, 2021
While most doctoral students aspire to become a full-time professor, many graduates with doctoral degrees may instead be employed in temporary positions as university teachers or researchers. The purpose of this paper is to assess the extent to which these early employment experiences differ for doctoral graduates of various fields of study, using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Market, Doctoral Degrees, College Faculty
Fitzsimons, Camilla; Henry, Sean; O'Neill, Jerry – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2022
The paper analyses how educators employed on non-permanent contracts in the non-compulsory education sector in Ireland have fared during the COVID-19 pandemic. These employees were starting from a low base in relation to the terms and conditions of their employment when their places of work dramatically pivoted online in March 2020. We argue the…
Descriptors: Temporary Employment, COVID-19, Pandemics, Higher Education
Kay M. Hammond; Meenal Rai; Amira Hassouna; Sue Raleigh – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2023
Continuous increase of global reliance on sessional staff in higher education has not been accompanied by the development of strategies to enhance quality learning and teaching or understanding the experiences of these staff. This has resulted in a general discontent among this category of academics. The growing importance of building respectful…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Employment Practices, College Faculty, Temporary Employment
Mason, Olivia; Megoran, Nick – Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences, 2021
The increased reliance of universities on a pool of highly skilled but poorly paid casualised academic labour for teaching and research has emerged as a defining feature of higher education provision under neoliberal New Public Management. Based on seventeen visual timeline interviews with academics in the North East of England, this article…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Practices, Neoliberalism
Jennifer Hynes; Sarah-Jane Cullinane – Irish Educational Studies, 2024
An increasing body of work has found higher education to be a challenging and stressful environment. Meanwhile, research on workaholism, characterised by an uncontrollable urge to work excessively, has been gaining momentum. However, few studies have explored its impact within higher education. This study addressed this gap by conducting 27…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Faculty, Work Ethic
Wheelahan, Leesa; Moodie, Gavin – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2022
This paper argues that micro-credentials are gig credentials for the gig economy. Micro-credentials are short competency-based industry-aligned units of learning, while the gig economy comprises contingent work by individual 'suppliers'. Both can be facilitated by (often the same) digital platforms, and both are underpinned by social relations of…
Descriptors: Employment Qualifications, Temporary Employment, Credentials, Labor Market
Stewart, Nicole K.; Rahman, Anis; Adams, Philippa R.; Hughes, John – Communication Education, 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic amplified existing inequities in higher education. This paper documents the stories of four precariously employed communication instructors in their transition to emergency remote teaching in March 2020. Through collaborative autoethnography, the instructors share their stories of reliance and compliance within the gig…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Distance Education, Higher Education
Heffernan, Troy A. – International Journal for Academic Development, 2018
Levels of career support for sessional academics vary widely. This paper surveyed 109 sessional academics and demonstrates that a lack of career development for them is a widespread issue. The study finds that some sessional academics receive career support opportunities, while others receive nothing. As the number of sessional academics continues…
Descriptors: Career Development, Higher Education, College Faculty, Adjunct Faculty