Move or perish? Sticky mobilities in the Swiss academic context

Détails

Ressource 1Demande d'une copie Sous embargo indéterminé.
Accès restreint UNIL
Etat: Public
Version: Final published version
Licence: CC BY 4.0
ID Serval
serval:BIB_D7E572DAD1AE
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Move or perish? Sticky mobilities in the Swiss academic context
Périodique
Higher Education
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Sautier Marie
ISSN
0018-1560
1573-174X
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
29/05/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Langue
anglais
Notes
Article accessible en open access à https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10734-021-00722-7
Résumé
This article uses a context of increasing institutional demand to be geographically mobile to examine how early-career researchers move across borders. I explore the case of Swiss academia, a particularly competitive and attractive environment with the highest levels of inbound and outbound mobility in Europe. In line with the aims of the European Research Area, an EU programme created in 2000 to foster a pan-European academic labour market, Switzerland funds scientific mobility and promotes extended research trips abroad as tools to boost collaboration and research excellence. Therefore, Swiss institutions have valued mobility for professional and personal development. In the meantime, they have raised concerns about female academics not being mobile and the potential consequences of their local family ties on career inequalities. In this study, I explore how early-career researchers experience mobility and how their personal accounts challenge institutional definitions of being mobile or immobile. I draw on a qualitative analysis of 65 semi-structured interviews conducted for two EU research projects on early-career academics from various backgrounds. I show how empirical data question the traditional—and often gendered—mobile/immobile dichotomy. I also highlight how mobility practices are normalised by the interviewees. Moreover, using the concept of stickiness, I describe a subtle range of sticky-to-stretchy mobility experiences influenced by both structural and individual factors. Finally, through the figure of the geoccasional worker, I question romanticised visions of mobility and stress the need to reconsider mobility as a (gendered) precarity issue rather than as a female problem.
Mots-clé
Academic mobility, Sticky mobility, Early-career researchers, Casualisation, Precarity, Postdoctorate, Work-life balance
Open Access
Oui
Financement(s)
Université de Lausanne
Fonds national suisse
Création de la notice
01/06/2021 11:04
Dernière modification de la notice
20/08/2021 6:40
Données d'usage