The COVID-19 pandemic intensified anxieties among temporary workers in New Zealand tertiary education, particularly those affiliated with universities reliant on the lucrative market for international fee-paying students. As national borders closed and states started looking inward, these same learning institutions began to more visibly express the language of market logics for which they had been remodeled in recent decades, adapting to declining revenue through austerity-like budget cuts. The communication of these cuts to the academic precariat has been mixed, with some institutions resorting to cold, forceful determinations delivered as matter-of-fact restructurings, while others have preferred an oblique recasting of the pandemic's dis...
Writing in 1954, Hannah Arendt describes crises as an “opportunity[…]to explore and inquire into wha...
This open access book explores the impact of Covid-19 on universities, and how students, staff, facu...
COVID-19 has increased research, teaching and administrative pressures for all academics and, by doi...
The COVID-19 pandemic intensified anxieties among temporary workers in New Zealand tertiary educatio...
The phenomenon of the Covid-19 lockdown in New Zealand during 2020 enabled two Higher Education (HE)...
Universities in the UK, and in other countries like Australia and the USA, have responded to the ope...
Despite the growing size of the academic precariat in the tertiary sector, this exploited group of w...
The coronavirus pandemic and associated move to online learning for students in higher education has...
In March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted academic educational programmes in universities acros...
Although Australia has (so far) contained the spread of Covid-19 within its population relatively su...
This paper reflects on our joint gendered experience of precarity in UK Higher Education; a conversa...
The COVID-19 pandemic has profoundly affected the university sector across the world. This article r...
This article discusses the story of Steven, a precarious academic worker, and his decision to work f...
Vaccines and treatments produced during the global coronavirus crisis demonstrated the importance of...
Introduction. COVID-19 has increased research, teaching and administrative pressures for all academi...
Writing in 1954, Hannah Arendt describes crises as an “opportunity[…]to explore and inquire into wha...
This open access book explores the impact of Covid-19 on universities, and how students, staff, facu...
COVID-19 has increased research, teaching and administrative pressures for all academics and, by doi...
The COVID-19 pandemic intensified anxieties among temporary workers in New Zealand tertiary educatio...
The phenomenon of the Covid-19 lockdown in New Zealand during 2020 enabled two Higher Education (HE)...
Universities in the UK, and in other countries like Australia and the USA, have responded to the ope...
Despite the growing size of the academic precariat in the tertiary sector, this exploited group of w...
The coronavirus pandemic and associated move to online learning for students in higher education has...
In March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted academic educational programmes in universities acros...
Although Australia has (so far) contained the spread of Covid-19 within its population relatively su...
This paper reflects on our joint gendered experience of precarity in UK Higher Education; a conversa...
The COVID-19 pandemic has profoundly affected the university sector across the world. This article r...
This article discusses the story of Steven, a precarious academic worker, and his decision to work f...
Vaccines and treatments produced during the global coronavirus crisis demonstrated the importance of...
Introduction. COVID-19 has increased research, teaching and administrative pressures for all academi...
Writing in 1954, Hannah Arendt describes crises as an “opportunity[…]to explore and inquire into wha...
This open access book explores the impact of Covid-19 on universities, and how students, staff, facu...
COVID-19 has increased research, teaching and administrative pressures for all academics and, by doi...