The impact of the pandemic on early career researchers: what we already know from the internationally published literature

Author:

Herman Eti1ORCID,Nicholas David2ORCID,Watkinson Anthony3ORCID,Rodríguez-Bravo Blanca4ORCID,Abrizah Abdullah5ORCID,Boukacem-Zeghmouri Chérifa6ORCID,Jamali Hamid R.7ORCID,Sims David8ORCID,Allard Suzie8ORCID,Tenopir Carol8ORCID,Xu Jie9ORCID,Świgoń Marzena10ORCID,Serbina Galina11ORCID,Cannon Leah Parke8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CIBER Research Ltd. University of Haifa

2. CIBER Research Ltd.

3. CIBER Research Ltd

4. Universidad de León

5. University of Malaya

6. Université de Lyon

7. Charles Sturt University

8. University of Tennessee

9. Wuhan University

10. Uniwersytet Warminsko-Mazurski

11. Tomsk State University

Abstract

In order to take account of the impact of the pandemic on the already changing scholarly communications and work-life of early career researchers (ECRs), the 4-year long Harbingers study was extended for another two years. As a precursor to the study (featuring interviews and a questionnaire survey), currently underway, an analytic review of the pertinent literature was undertaken and its results are presented here. The review focuses on the challenges faced by ECRs and how these compare to the ones more senior researchers have to tackle. In the examination of the literature three general questions are posed: Q1) What are the identifiable and forthcoming impacts of the pandemic-induced financial pressures felt in the Higher Education sector on ECRs’ employment and career development prospects? Q2) What are the identifiable and forthcoming pandemic-associated disruptions in the pace/focus/direction of the research undertaking? Have any disruptions been predicted to exert an impact on ECRs’ research activities, and if so, with what scholarly consequences? Q3) How is the work-life of ECRs shaping up under the virus-dictated rules of the ‘new normal’ in the research undertaking? What challenges, if any, arise from the changes in practices identified, and what might their potential consequences be for ECRs? The broad conclusion of the study is that the literature leaves little room for doubt: junior researchers are already disproportionally affected by and bear the burden of the ongoing pandemic-incurred hardships and they are likely to remain similarly impacted when more trials, still unfolding, materialise.

Publisher

Ediciones Profesionales de la Informacion SL

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Information Systems

Reference91 articles.

1. AAS; EMCR-Early; Mid-Career Researcher Forum (2020). Impacts of Covid-19 for EMCRS. National survey report, August 12. Australian Academy of Science. https://www.science.org.au/files/userfiles/support/documents/covid19-emcr-impact-report.pdf

2. Anderson, Janna Q.; Rainie, Lee (2010b). Millennials will make online sharing in networks a lifelong habit. Pew Research Center. https://www.pewinternet.org/2010/07/09/millennials-will-make-online-sharing-in-networks-a-lifelong-habit

3. Arnold, Carrie; Woolston, Chris (2020). “Uncertainty plagues junior researchers from underprivileged backgrounds amid pandemic”. Nature, n. 588, pp. 355-357. https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-020-03465-0

4. Baker, Simon (2020a). “HE financial crisis risks ‘lost generation of researchers’”. Times higher education, June 11. https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/he-financial-crisis-risks-lost-generation-researchers

5. Baker, Simon (2020b). “Most early career academics face funding cliff edge, survey suggests”. Times higher education, May 18. https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/most-early-career-academics-face-funding-cliff-edge-survey-suggests

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