02206nas a2200217 4500008004100000245012400041210006900165260001600234300000900250490000700259520152800266653001501794653001101809653001201820653001401832653001701846100001801863700002101881700001601902856007001918 2014 eng d00aThe experiences of senior positional leaders in Australian, Irish and Portuguese universities: universal or contingent?0 aexperiences of senior positional leaders in Australian Irish and c31 Jan 2014 a5-180 v333 a
This article is concerned with the extent to which the leadership of higher education is a universally positive or contingent experience. It draws on comparative data from semi-structured interviews with those in senior leadership positions in public universities in Australia, Ireland and Portugal, countries which are differently located on the collegial/managerial continuum. It looks at their perceptions of the advantages/disadvantages of these positions. Universal trends emerge, arising from difficulties created by the shortage of resources consequent on neo-liberalist pressures; from the non-viability of a managerialist discourse as a source of meaning; from the positive character of the university as a knowledge-generating organisation; and from the gendered satisfactions derived by men and women from occupying these senior leadership positions. Contingent trends include the tension between academic and managerial roles, which is strongest in the Portuguese collegial structures; while the negative impact on personal well-being is most apparent among the Australian respondents in the most managerialist structure. The paper concludes that assumptions that senior leadership positions are universally positive is not supported. It suggests that the attractiveness of these positions – contested in a collegial structure – may be further reduced in increasingly managerialist contexts, with the challenge of diversity, so important to innovation and economic growth, being particularly acute.
10acontingent10aGender10aleaders10auniversal10auniversities1 aO'Connor, Pat1 aCarvalho, Teresa1 aWhite, Kate uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07294360.2013.864608