This article extends examinations of the gendered nature of care and service in academia, with a particular focus on the labour of maintaining conference communities. Utilising empirical data from a cultural history of the International Academic Identities Conference, we draw on interviews with 32 conference organisers, keynote speakers and participants to explore the gendered dynamics of reproducing conference communities. While some participants experienced exclusions, most participants described a conference that felt caring, welcoming and like ‘home’. Following this discussion, we interrogate the idea of the conference as ‘home’, asking questions about the gendered division of ‘academic housekeeping’ practices that underpin such home-ma...
Our main goal in this article is to discuss the structural and persistent problems experienced by wo...
While a wider context of crisis and neoliberal practices engulfing academia has triggered a variety ...
YesThis paper is about three working class women academics in their 40s, who are at different phases...
This article extends examinations of the gendered nature of care and service in academia, with a par...
This article extends examinations of the gendered nature of care and service in academia, with a par...
This article explores how academics with caring responsibilities negotiate the mobility imperative, ...
Across the contemporary global higher education sector, there is an increased focus on gender and th...
The study departs from the perspective that conferences are important but neglected research sites. ...
‘I was thinking, “I’ve travelled all this way, and I was looking forward to this, and my mind is som...
Waking up to the reactivity of concepts, to their myriad possibilities for signification, to the ran...
While other disciplines have engaged with critiquing work-life balance, tourism studies has been slo...
Place is not a neutral backdrop against which knowledge production unfolds; it plays an important ro...
The overarching argument made in this article is twofold. Firstly, academic conferences are posited ...
Anthropologists have developed an important corpus of work on embodiment and social agency. But what...
Historically, universities have centred around white-ness and masculinity, meaning that people who d...
Our main goal in this article is to discuss the structural and persistent problems experienced by wo...
While a wider context of crisis and neoliberal practices engulfing academia has triggered a variety ...
YesThis paper is about three working class women academics in their 40s, who are at different phases...
This article extends examinations of the gendered nature of care and service in academia, with a par...
This article extends examinations of the gendered nature of care and service in academia, with a par...
This article explores how academics with caring responsibilities negotiate the mobility imperative, ...
Across the contemporary global higher education sector, there is an increased focus on gender and th...
The study departs from the perspective that conferences are important but neglected research sites. ...
‘I was thinking, “I’ve travelled all this way, and I was looking forward to this, and my mind is som...
Waking up to the reactivity of concepts, to their myriad possibilities for signification, to the ran...
While other disciplines have engaged with critiquing work-life balance, tourism studies has been slo...
Place is not a neutral backdrop against which knowledge production unfolds; it plays an important ro...
The overarching argument made in this article is twofold. Firstly, academic conferences are posited ...
Anthropologists have developed an important corpus of work on embodiment and social agency. But what...
Historically, universities have centred around white-ness and masculinity, meaning that people who d...
Our main goal in this article is to discuss the structural and persistent problems experienced by wo...
While a wider context of crisis and neoliberal practices engulfing academia has triggered a variety ...
YesThis paper is about three working class women academics in their 40s, who are at different phases...