This thesis examines the experiences of sole parents within the institutional conditions of postgraduate education in Australian universities. To investigate how sole parents negotiate the conditions of postgraduate education I undertake a theoretical analysis of gender performativity and accountability drawing primarily on the works of Judith Butler (1997, 2005). Drawing from interviews with 10 sole parents, this research is a collective case study which is attentive to how gender is performed through particular constructions of gendered parenting at an intersecting point with postgraduate education. The distinctive experiences of sole parent postgraduates are significant because as at June 2012, there were 600,892 one parents families wit...
© 2017, © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In this paper, we offer a cr...
Historically, university cultures have been described as masculine in orientation, and the ‘ideal le...
If democratisation in the tertiary sector is to be taken seriously, then we must carefully survey ho...
In this paper I explore the emotional geographies of Australian universities which tend to (re)produ...
Unequal distribution of child rearing and domestic responsibilities between parents contributes to g...
In this thesis I investigate the influence of mentoring on the formation of the identities of women ...
This book examines how sole parents are constituted within university contexts, through social disco...
This dissertation examines how the social and material relations of higher education coordinate and ...
Women remain under-represented in almost all academic levels at universities internationally, and pr...
Unequal distribution of child rearing and domestic responsibilities between parents contributes to g...
The current socio-political climate, with its ever intense pressures for performative ‘excellence’, ...
The participation of parents in the schooling of their children has become a central policy objectiv...
Women remain underrepresented in senior positions within universities and report barriers to career ...
Women remain underrepresented in secondary school headship and executive headship in England. A patr...
Since the 1970s, women have formed a growing percentage of university graduates and more female grad...
© 2017, © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In this paper, we offer a cr...
Historically, university cultures have been described as masculine in orientation, and the ‘ideal le...
If democratisation in the tertiary sector is to be taken seriously, then we must carefully survey ho...
In this paper I explore the emotional geographies of Australian universities which tend to (re)produ...
Unequal distribution of child rearing and domestic responsibilities between parents contributes to g...
In this thesis I investigate the influence of mentoring on the formation of the identities of women ...
This book examines how sole parents are constituted within university contexts, through social disco...
This dissertation examines how the social and material relations of higher education coordinate and ...
Women remain under-represented in almost all academic levels at universities internationally, and pr...
Unequal distribution of child rearing and domestic responsibilities between parents contributes to g...
The current socio-political climate, with its ever intense pressures for performative ‘excellence’, ...
The participation of parents in the schooling of their children has become a central policy objectiv...
Women remain underrepresented in senior positions within universities and report barriers to career ...
Women remain underrepresented in secondary school headship and executive headship in England. A patr...
Since the 1970s, women have formed a growing percentage of university graduates and more female grad...
© 2017, © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In this paper, we offer a cr...
Historically, university cultures have been described as masculine in orientation, and the ‘ideal le...
If democratisation in the tertiary sector is to be taken seriously, then we must carefully survey ho...