This paper discusses the synthesised findings from two interdisciplinary, feminist studies conducted under the auspices of the non-corporate nexus, the Women’s Academic Network at Bournemouth University, UK, of which the main author is a co-convenor and co-founder. These qualitative studies focus on academic women’s experiences of managing careers in the work culture of corporate Institutions of Higher Education (HEI) in a modern UK university. The background to this work draws from a body of international research into the slower career progression rates of women academics in comparison to male counterparts and gendered barriers the former encounter. While there has encouragement within Higher Education bodies across the EU to balance out ...
ABSTRACT Norman Fairclough has coined the term ‘technologization of dis-course’. This he defines as ...
Gender inequality prevails in academia; there is currently no review on the barriers and facilitator...
In this article, two female academics confront their role in producing their own invisibility and ir...
In this paper a critical, syncretic discussion is offered of two connected, qualitative feminist stu...
Corporatization of Higher Education has introduced new performance measurements as well as an accele...
Corporatization of Higher Education has introduced new performance measurements as well as an accele...
Gender discrimination in the academy globally is widely recognised in terms of faculty ranking and c...
Three female, and feminist, academics become participant researchers to explore their working practi...
Categorical career stages offer an institutional framework through which mobilities can be claimed a...
Despite the considerable advances of the feminist movement across Western societies, in Universities...
UK Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) have gone through a series of major changes over the last fe...
Despite attempts to broaden access to higher education in the UK through widening participation poli...
This themed issue of Gender and Education features articles about higher education (HE), exploring h...
The authors in this chapter argue that with the increasing marketization of higher education, the en...
This paper explores the development and maintenance of familiar gendered employment patterns and pra...
ABSTRACT Norman Fairclough has coined the term ‘technologization of dis-course’. This he defines as ...
Gender inequality prevails in academia; there is currently no review on the barriers and facilitator...
In this article, two female academics confront their role in producing their own invisibility and ir...
In this paper a critical, syncretic discussion is offered of two connected, qualitative feminist stu...
Corporatization of Higher Education has introduced new performance measurements as well as an accele...
Corporatization of Higher Education has introduced new performance measurements as well as an accele...
Gender discrimination in the academy globally is widely recognised in terms of faculty ranking and c...
Three female, and feminist, academics become participant researchers to explore their working practi...
Categorical career stages offer an institutional framework through which mobilities can be claimed a...
Despite the considerable advances of the feminist movement across Western societies, in Universities...
UK Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) have gone through a series of major changes over the last fe...
Despite attempts to broaden access to higher education in the UK through widening participation poli...
This themed issue of Gender and Education features articles about higher education (HE), exploring h...
The authors in this chapter argue that with the increasing marketization of higher education, the en...
This paper explores the development and maintenance of familiar gendered employment patterns and pra...
ABSTRACT Norman Fairclough has coined the term ‘technologization of dis-course’. This he defines as ...
Gender inequality prevails in academia; there is currently no review on the barriers and facilitator...
In this article, two female academics confront their role in producing their own invisibility and ir...