Affiliation:
1. Western University
2. Faculty of Education, Western University (London, Ontario, Canada)
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted academic labour, with women being disproportionately negatively affected. This scoping review provides an exploratory snapshot into the corpus of literature investigating the impact of the pandemic on academic labour. We used a set of criteria to first identify the 86 titles from which we selected 45 as the data set. We analyzed the data on characteristics of location, investigative methods, publication information, and discipline. The findings showed that most of the data were global in context; used primarily qualitative methodologies; published in a wide variety of journals; and spanned diverse disciplines, including science and health, education, business, sociology, and political sciences. We then analyzed the data thematically. The themes we identified were gender inequity, identities and intersectionality, performing work-home binaries, and invisible labour. We added a fifth theme, lived experiences, consisting of women academics’ firsthand accounts. We consider this theme unique, despite its overlap with the other themes, because it is evidence of women academics telling their personal stories. We discuss how our findings show that pandemic conditions worsened existing inequities. The solutions most often cited in the data place emphasis and responsibility on the individual, but we argue that institutions should instead be responsible to redress inequities through improving workplace labour processes. Our research can aid future research on how policy theory can inform socially just policies and practices in the post-pandemic university.
Reference38 articles.
1. Academic Women’s Association. (2019, June 20). U15 leadership remains largely white and male despite 33 years of equity initiatives [Press release]. University of Alberta. https://uofaawa.wordpress.com/2019/06/20/u15-leadership-remains-largely-white-and-male-despite-33-years-of-equity-initiatives
2. Acker, S. (1980). Women, the other academics. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 1(1), 81–91. https://doi.org/10.1080/0142569800010106
3. Acker, S. (1994). Gendered education: Sociological reflections on women, teaching, and feminism. Open University Press.
4. Acker, S. (2003). The concerns of Canadian women academics: Will faculty shortages make things better or worse? McGill Journal of Education / Revue des sciences de l’éducation de McGill, 38(3). https://mje.mcgill.ca/article/view/8702
5. Acker, S. & Wagner, A. (2019) Feminist scholars working around the neoliberal university. Gender and Education, 31(1), 62–81. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540253.2017.1296117