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What ongoing staff can do to support precariously employed colleagues: the Academic Precariat

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 15:53 authored by Jessica Ford, Jess Ison, Lara McKenzie, Fabian Cannizzo, Louise Mayhew, Natalie Osborne, Benjamin CookeBenjamin Cooke
There is a growing divide between ongoing and precarious academics in Australia. Precarious academics are often exploited, underpaid, and have little hope of gaining permanency. In this article we offer suggestions to ongoing academics on how to improve the working lives and conditions of precarious colleagues. Our suggestions range from easy and straightforward to more challenging. We offer them to encourage discussion and action, and to inspire ongoing academics to consider how the circumstances of precarious academics today may differ from their own experiences as 'early career' academics.

History

Journal

Australian Universities Review

Volume

62

Issue

1

Start page

57

End page

62

Total pages

6

Publisher

National Tertiary Education Union

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 The Australian Universities' Review

Former Identifier

2006103485

Esploro creation date

2021-04-21

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