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Precarity, gender and care in the neoliberal academy
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File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Ivancheva, Lynch and Keating 2019 accepted version-Gender,_Work_&_Organization.pdf | 488.47 KB |
Date Issued
10 February 2019
Date Available
29T09:56:47Z May 2019
Abstract
This article examines the rise in precarious academic employment in Ireland as an outcome of the higher education restructuring following OECD (Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development), government initiatives and post‐crisis austerity. Presenting the narratives of academic women at different career stages, we claim that a focus on care sheds new light on the debate on precarity. A more complete understanding of precarity should take account not only of the contractual security but also affective relational security in the lives of employees. The intersectionality of paid work and care work lives was a dominant theme in our interviews among academic women. In a globalized academic market, premised on the care‐free masculinized ideals of competitive performance, 24/7 work and geographical mobility, women who opt out of these norms, suffer labour‐led contractual precarity and are over‐represented in part‐time and fixed‐term positions. Women who comply with these organizational commands need to peripheralize their relational lives and experience care‐led affective precarity.
Sponsorship
Irish Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Gender, Work & Organization
Volume
26
Issue
4
Start Page
448
End Page
462
Copyright (Published Version)
2019 Wiley
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0968-6673
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Scopus© citations
0
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