12 Nov 2025

Varieties of academic precarity across (and beyond) Europe: Anthropology of Labour Network Webinar

Webinar

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12 November, 5-7 pm CET

Employment in academia – anthropology departments included – is increasingly shaped by the marketization of higher education and the resulting changes in academic labour under late-stage capitalism. Whilst academic work historically involved both research and teaching activities, the reduction in research funding, and fluctuations in public funding in general – as well as in student numbers – have contributed to an increase in the academic division of labour. Scholars on research contracts, often tied to external grants, tend to be in insecure, fixed-term employment, while much of the teaching is being done by hourly paid, junior scholars or by those on teaching-only contracts, with limited options to engage in the research needed for career progress.

Despite the common trend of increasing precarity in academic work, the specific forms that this takes vary. In some parts of Europe, contracts may be permanent but with a low guaranteed salary, making academics compete for external funding to ‘top up’ their income or hold more than one contract at any one time. The political shift to the right in many countries has led to attacks on academic freedoms, and cuts to research budgets have resulted in widespread redundancies or even the closure of whole departments, especially in the humanities and social sciences, further deepening the precarity of academic work.

In this webinar, we will engage in discussions of experiences of academic precarity in different geographical and institutional contexts, and at different career stages, in conversation with scholars who have researched the issue.

Speakers

Bhargabi Das

Bhargabi Das is Assistant Professor in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Department of Rural Management at Shiv Nadar University, Delhi-NCR. Besides working on state-society relations of marginalized communities living in liminal, unstable riverine island ecologies in Northeast India, she has also written about racialization and precarity in neoliberal academia from a decolonial standpoint. Her recent article, co-authored with Ana Ivasiuc, is an auto-ethnographic account of teaching in a neo-liberal Irish academia and how to practice care and engage in decolonial pedagogic techniques. In the past, she has been an Irish Research Council Scholar.

Martin Fotta

Martin Fotta is the head of the Department of Mobility and Migration at the Institute of Ethnology at the Czech Academy of Sciences. Among his primary research interests are informal economic strategies, mobilities, race and racialisation and welfare state transformations. He is a co-author, with Mariya Ivancheva and Raluca Pernes, of a report on precarity and labour conditions within academic anthropology entitled The Anthropological Career in Europe: A complete report on the EASA membership survey (EASA, 2020) and a co-editor, with Paloma Gay y Blasco, of Romani Chronicles of COVID-19: Testimonies of Harm and Resilience (Berghahn, 2023).

Mariya Ivancheva

Mariya Ivancheva (Strathclyde Institute of Education) is an anthropologist and sociologist of higher education and labour. Her research and advocacy focus on casualisation, digitalisation and intersectional inequalities in academia and other high-skilled labour markets. She is the author of the monograph The Alternative University: Lessons from Bolivarian Venezuela (2023), and has been active in struggles for labour, gender, racial and financial justice. 

Roberto Mozzachiodi

Roberto Mozzachiodi is a casualised academic, a workplace organiser, and a translator. He is a member of the “Notes from Below” collective.

Aslı Vatansever

Aslı Vatansever (PhD University of Hamburg, 2010) is the Director of Development and Philanthropy at Bard College in Berlin. She is a sociologist of work and social stratification with a focus on precarious academic labor, dismissed from her office as associate professor and banned from public service in Turkey for having signed the Peace Petition of the Academics for Peace in 2016. She is the author of At the Margins of Academia. Exile, Precariousness, and Subjectivity (Brill 2020).

Chair

Marketa Dolezalova

Irene Peano

Contacts

Irene Peano

AoL convenor