Academic career: on institutions, social capital and gender

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Abstract

During decades of change in the Western higher education sector, new ways of understanding academic work have reinforced notions of the impact of social capital. The present study investigates researchers’ experiences of their own career making within two areas of Education Sciences in Swedish higher education: Childhood Studies (CS) and Science Education (SE). The structure at the CS departments is collaborative and integrated; teaching and research are seen as an entity. This structure creates a coherent career path where members of the collective group jointly produce and accumulate social capital; it also appears to be related to discourses of femininity. In the SE departments, the career structure is strategic and differentiated; the two career paths work in parallel through a differentiation between teaching and research. This appears to be related to discourses of masculinity. In conclusion, our analysis shows how social capital and gender mutually create different ways of doing an academic career.

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APA

Angervall, P., Gustafsson, J., & Silfver, E. (2018). Academic career: on institutions, social capital and gender. Higher Education Research and Development, 37(6), 1095–1108. https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360.2018.1477743

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