What prevents universities from ‘building back better’? Fault lines in university structures of care during the COVID-19 pandemic

IF 2.6 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH European Journal of Higher Education Pub Date : 2023-10-06 DOI:10.1080/21568235.2023.2265599
Martin Oliver, Allison Littlejohn, Eileen Kennedy
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Abstract

Universities may have coped with the COVID-19 pandemic, but we argue there are still important lessons to be learnt from that experience of coping. In this paper, we explore whether universities could improve what they do, rather than just returning to pre-lockdown ways of working. We do this by analyzing a series of interviews with staff, recorded during the lockdown in the UK, using Tronto’s political theory of care. This analysis does not suggest that universities simply need to be more caring; it shows, instead, that they were already full of complex and overlapping caring activities. What staff accounts highlighted, however, were the fault lines between responsibilities for academic work and the tasks of caring; the competing priorities staff faced, between work, home and self; and how the burden of caring work was (and still is) unfairly distributed, with consequences for the wellbeing of staff. We conclude by suggesting that better-integrated caring practices are needed, and that developing these will require paying attention to the labour it takes to sustain academic work, and taking responsibility for helping the often-overlooked people who do this.
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是什么阻碍了大学“重建得更好”?COVID-19大流行期间大学护理结构的断层线
大学可能已经应对了COVID-19大流行,但我们认为,仍然可以从应对经验中吸取重要教训。在本文中,我们探讨了大学是否可以改进他们的工作,而不仅仅是回到封锁前的工作方式。我们利用特伦托的政治关怀理论,分析了在英国封锁期间对工作人员的一系列采访,从而得出了这一结论。这一分析并不是说大学需要更关心学生;相反,它表明它们已经充满了复杂和重叠的关怀活动。然而,工作人员的描述强调的是学术工作的责任和照顾他人的任务之间的断层;员工面临着工作、家庭和自我之间的优先竞争;以及照顾工作的负担是如何不公平地分配的(现在仍然如此),这对员工的福祉造成了影响。我们的结论是,需要更好的综合护理实践,而发展这些实践将需要关注维持学术工作所需的劳动,并承担起帮助那些经常被忽视的人的责任。
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来源期刊
European Journal of Higher Education
European Journal of Higher Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Higher Education (EJHE) aims to offer comprehensive coverage of theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of higher education, analyses of European and national higher education reforms and processes, and European comparative studies or comparisons between European and non-European higher education systems and institutions. Building on the successful legacy of its predecessor, Higher Education in Europe, EJHE is establishing itself as one of the flagship journals in the study of higher education and specifically in study of European higher education.
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