Drawing on various secondary sources and direct encounters with casual academic staff, this article examines the emergent context and lived experiences of casualisation in Australian universities, with specific reference to on-going developments in teaching arrangements across the sector. Particular attention is paid to the challenges associated with the ‘precarious’ nature of casual employment and what this means in terms of engagement with academics in more secure forms of employment and their respective institutions more generally. The article concludes by inviting continuing academics to reconsider both how they think about and engage with large scale casualisation in their midst, and what this might mean from an activist standpoint that views such employment arrangements as disempowering and iniquitous.
Journal article
A precarious presence: some realities and challenges of academic casualisation in Australian universities
Australian Universities Review, Vol.55(2), pp.51-59
2013
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- A precarious presence: some realities and challenges of academic casualisation in Australian universities
- Creators
- Maarten Richard Rothengatter - Southern Cross UniversityRichard Hil - Griffith University
- Publication Details
- Australian Universities Review, Vol.55(2), pp.51-59
- Identifiers
- 2084; 991012820387302368
- Academic Unit
- School of Arts and Social Sciences
- Resource Type
- Journal article