Invisible innovation: Intellectual labour on regional university campuses in Australia

Author:

Schmidt Merete1ORCID,Aberdeen Lucinda2,Carlon Colleen3,Eversole Robyn4

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Sciences, University of Tasmania, Cradle Coast Campus 2–4 Bass Highway, Tasmania 7320, Australia

2. Department of Rural Health, University of Melbourne, 49 Graham St, Shepparton, Victoria, 3630, Australia

3. Edith Cowan University, South West Campus, Robertson Drive, Bunbury, 6230, Australia

4. Bucknell University, Freeman College of Management, One Dent Drive, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 17837, USA

Abstract

In Australia, regional university campuses occupy a geographically and institutionally peripheral position in a metrocentric higher education system. We argue that the concentration of research funding and capabilities at metropolitan campuses devalues the intellectual labour of academics working on regional university campuses. The authors use collaborative autoethnography to explore a common theme of ‘gap filling’, that is, mobilising scarce resources to create unique solutions for local issues, and draw on Southern Theory to theorise the implications for our work in the location-based power relations of the Australian knowledge production economy. In this context, we utilise Eversole's concept of ‘invisible innovation’ to theorise how the important place-based knowledge work associated with ‘gap filling’ on regional university campuses is rendered invisible by the metrocentric geopolitics of knowledge production within Australia. The research reveals that the place-based knowledge work of regional academics fills gaps in regional services and resources through innovations largely unrecognised within the higher education system.

Funder

Spencer Foundation

Edith Cowan University

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference79 articles.

1. Community-Based Organizations and Institutional Work in the Remote Rural West

2. AIHW (2022). Suicide & self-harm monitoring. Retrieved February 8, 2024, from https://www.aihw.gov.au/suicide-self-harm-monitoring/data/geography/suicide-by-remoteness-areas

3. AIHW (2023). Rural and remote health. Retrieved February 8, 2024, from https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/rural-remote-australians/rural-and-remote-health

4. Analytic Autoethnography

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