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-List Of Titles -“Inspired and assisted”, or “berated and destroyed”? Research leadership, management and performativity in troubled times

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/152206

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Title
“Inspired and assisted”, or “berated and destroyed”? Research leadership, management and performativity in troubled times
Related
Ethics and education, Vol. 6, Issue 3, (2011), p.293-306
DOI
10.1080/17449642.2011.632722
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Date
2011
Author/Creator
Saltmarsh, Sue
Author/Creator
Sutherland-Smith, Wendy
Author/Creator
Randell-Moon, Holly
Description
Research leadership in Australian universities takes place against a backdrop of policy reforms concerned with measurement and comparison of institutional research performance. In particular, the Excellence in Research in Australian initiative undertaken by the Australian Research Council sets out to evaluate research quality in Australian universities, using a combination of expert review process, and assessment of performance against ‘quality indicators’. Benchmarking exercises of this sort continue to shape institutional policy and practice, with inevitable effects on the ways in which research leadership, mentoring and practice are played out within university faculties and departments. In an exploratory study that interviewed 32 Australian academics in universities in four Australian states, we asked participants, occupying formal or informal research leadership roles, to comment on their perceptions of research leadership as envisioned and enacted in their particular workplaces. We found a pervasive concern amongst participants that coalesced around binaries characterized in metaphoric terms of ‘carrots and whips’. Research leadership was seen by many as managerial in nature, and as such, largely tethered to instrumentalist notions of productivity and performativity, while research cultures were seen as languishing under the demoralizing weight of reward and punishment systems. Here, we consider what is at stake for the future of the academic workforce under such conditions, arguing that new models of visionary research leadership are urgently needed in the ‘troubled times’ of techno-bureaucratic university reforms.
Description
14 page(s)
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Media, Music, Communication and Cultural Studies

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/152206
Identifier
ISSN:1744-9650
Identifier
mq_res-20120113-16293
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Ethics and education"
 
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