[csaa-forum] postgrad labour
Glen Fuller
g.fuller at uws.edu.au
Thu Jul 14 14:21:28 CST 2005
Hi list,
To help me with an upcoming talk/paper I was wondering if it would be
possible for any postgrads on the list to email me through details of
academic employment. I want a brief sketch that outlines the nature of
extra-thesis postgrad labour and what role this plays in the broader
academic workplace. Specifically what I want are answers to these
questions:
1) year started and number of semesters of postgrad study/research
2) scholarship stipend recipient, yes or no?
3) employed in academia during postgrad study/research, yes or no?
4) if yes to 3, was work short-term contract based, yes or no?
5) if no to 3, have you been employed elsewhere what was the nature of
the work?
6) if yes to 4, then number of semesters working short-term contract
work, split into rough percentage of a) research assistant work and b)
teaching/tutoring work.
7) a) What percentage of above work if any was _for_ your supervisor
(s), b) what percentage was _organised_ through your supervisor(s), c)
what percentage was organised through other academic contacts, and d)
what percentage was not organised through any contacts at all ('cold'
job application)?
This is not meant to be a 'total' social science style survey of
employment amongst postgrads, but just a few figures to throw around to
enable a discussion.
my email is (as above): gfuller at uws.edu.au
I welome any comments or anything on any actual research on the topic
of postgrad labour. Identities of commentators will remain anon if so
desired.
My basic thesis is that postgrads are a necessary excess of academic
labour. That is, necessary for the maintenance current power relations
within the university workplace.
What I find personally alarming are the parallels between casualised
academic labour (especially amongst postgrads) and what is happening in
the broader community regarding questions of IR reforms. It seems to me
that if John Howard really does want to drive the quality of life down
to sufficient levels to compete with the productivity of emerging 3rd
world countries, then maybe he should model IR reforms on the system
that allows for the continual employment of casual academic staff.
ciao,
glen.
--
PhD Candidate
Centre for Cultural Research
University of Western Sydney
Read my rants: http://glenfuller.blogspot.com/
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