Researchers at Risk Precarity, Jeopardy and Uncertainty in Academia /

Podrobná bibliografie
Korporativní autor: SpringerLink (Online service)
Další autoři: Mulligan, Deborah L. (Editor), Danaher, Patrick Alan (Editor)
Shrnutí:XXVI, 348 p. 16 illus., 3 illus. in color.
text
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2021.
Vydání:1st ed. 2021.
Edice:Palgrave Studies in Education Research Methods,
Témata:
On-line přístup:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-53857-6
Médium: Elektronický zdroj Kniha
Obsah:
  • Chapter 1. Conceptualising Researchers’ Risks and Synthesising Strategies for Engaging with those Risks: Articulating an Agenda for Apprehending Scholars’ Precarious Positions; Deborah L. Mulligan and Patrick Alan Danaher
  • SECTION I. Risks Related to the Internal Dimensions of Researchers (Researchers’ Identities)
  • Chapter 2. Still Anonymous: Stigma, Silencing and Sex Work in Australia; Dr Anonymous
  • Chapter 3. “Punctuation, Pause, Next Slide, Please”: The Risks of Research and Self-Disclosure in Australia and the United States; Dawne Fahey and Deborah Cunningham Breede
  • Chapter 4. Reconstructing Academic Identities at Risk: Conceptualising Wellbeing and Re-imaging Identities on Cyprus and in Australia; Irina Lokhtina and Mark A. Tyler
  • Chapter 5. When Faith is on the Line: Exploring the Personal Risks and Rewards of Transformative Learning; Rian Roux
  • Chapter 6. The Risky Responsibility of Doctoral Writing as Grief Work: Lessons Learnt whilst Journeying with Trauma in Australia; Deborah L. Mulligan
  • SECTION II. Risks Related to the External Dimensions of Researchers (Researchers’ Professions)
  • Chapter 7. “No Future for You”: Economic and Mental Health Risks in Young Spanish Researchers; Israel Martínez-Nicolás and Jorge García-Girón
  • Chapter 8. The Risks of Precarity: How Employment Insecurity Impacts on Early Career Researchers in Australia; Lara McKenzie
  • Chapter 9. How to Make the Cut in Academia: Managing the Uncertainty of Time as a Necessity to Having a Research Career in Germany; Jochem Kotthaus, Karsten Krampe, Andrea Piontek and Gerrit Weitzel
  • Chapter 10. The Need to be a Leader of Research in the United States: Take the Risk and Move Beyond Your Opponents; David B. Ross, Gina L. Peyton, Vanaja Nethi and Melissa T. Sasso
  • SECTION III. Risks Related to the Research Topic (Subject Matter)
  • Chapter 11. “God in the First Place – My First Talk and Dinner with a Salafi Group in Germany: What They Talked about’ and How I Dealt with the Risk”; Gerrit Weitzel
  • Chapter 12. Doing Feminist, Multispecies Research about Love and Abuse within the Neoliberalised Academy in Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia; Nik Taylor and Heather Fraser
  • Chapter 13. Irony Sandwich: Reflections on Research Silencing from an Australian Silenced Researcher; Jacqui Hoepner
  • Chapter 14. Embracing the Knot: The Importance of Personal Risk-Taking within Intercultural Research in Aboriginal Australia; Susan Janelle Moore
  • SECTION IV. Risks Related to the Research Setting (Conflict-Laden Locations
  • Chapter 15. “Horrified by the Experience”? Reflections on a Pakistani Organisation’s Feedback about Doctoral Research Findings; Syed Owais
  • Chapter 6. Where the Map Turns Red: The Multiple Expressions of Risk in Ethnographic Research in Balūchistān; Paola Colonello
  • Chapter 17. The Ethics of Ethics: A Help or Hindrance When Conducting Sensitive Research with Australian Veterans?; Nikki Jamieson
  • Chapter 18. Friend or Foe: The Perils of Conducting Research on Moral Injury in an Australian Veteran Population; Anne L. Macdonald
  • Chapter 19. Activist or Advocate? Redefining Scholarly Risk in a West African Research Context; Zibah Nwako
  • Chapter 20. Dangerous Decisions: The Precarity of Real-World Research – A Provocation; Deborah L. Mulligan
  • Chapter 21. Reconstructing Researchers at Risk and Risky Research: Some Answers to the Organising Questions; Deborah L. Mulligan and Patrick Alan Danaher.