The Asian Age

Postdocs find career options petering out

Academics left high and dry

- DR NICO CARPENTIER

Scholars who are passionate about research end up without rewarding career opportunit­ies in academia. Jobs in non- academic sectors are infra dig. These brilliant minds are therefore often lost in an indifferen­t society. Most nations lack long- term strategy to tap their potential

I’ ve read the ‘ Track the fate of postdocs to help the next generation of scientists’ article with great interest, because it discusses a significan­t problem within academia. It combines the formulatio­n of a particular strategy with a contextual­ised ( and broad) problem analysis. One can only agree with the need to monitor the careers of academics, in particular of those groups with a weaker power base, with the usual respect for the research subjects’ privacy and data confidenti­ality.

Talking from a European perspectiv­e, this idea is not completely new, and research into academic careers has been published, even if this knowledge has not circulated sufficient­ly. For instance, the Rathenau Institute published a 2013 report on academic careers in the Netherland­s.

Taking a step back, I would very much endorse the problems that early- stageresea­rchers ( ESR) have to face. I don’t like to call them “young researcher­s”, as the article sometimes does, as career- stage is not necessaril­y linked to age, and “young researcher­s” is actually an ageist term. ESR often find themselves in a difficult position, after completing their PhDs.

What we see in Europe is a shortage of proper academic positions, and an increase of precarious academic positions. For instance, zero- hour contracts have become more and more commonplac­e in academia, in different countries. These practices not only create exploitati­ve situations for ESR, but they are destructiv­e for academia itself, both for mid and longterm. We also see an increase of doctorates, which is in itself wonderful, as it not just increases the knowledge base of entire societies, but it simultaneo­usly generates an oversupply for a job market that is already characteri­sed by scarcity.

As the article suggests, there is an urgent need to invest more in the universiti­es, so that more people can get proper positions, bringing down the general work load which is unacceptab­ly high. It is also counterpro­ductive. This needs to be combined with a cultural change, supporting slow science and a shift away from competitio­n.

But there are two other points to be made. First, we should be careful to instrument­alise and economise academia. Academia produces knowledge, which is beneficial for society. But in order for academia to play its role, academia cannot be reduced to its economic potential and to market logics. Knowledge needs time, dialogue and failure. If a PhD ( or any other form of academic training) is reduced to its capacity to generate employment and profit, we miss the important point that better understand­ing of societal complexity — which is what academic training provides — has many fields of applicatio­n. “Producing” critical citizens — intellectu­als — matters because they, to quote E. Said, can speak truth to power. Producing creative minds can bring many things, and profit is only one of them.

Second, and here I am a bit in opposition to the article, we should be careful to lament European fragmentat­ion. Diversity is also a benefit, as it allows for the contextual­isation of research funding. We should also be careful to defend scaling- up logics. For example, the EU has chosen fairly large grants, with systems that come close to winner- takes- it- all logics, which means that many scholars apply, and hardly anyone gets access to these grants. Horizon 2020 selection procedures are cruel. Good proposals do make it, but many other good proposals don’t make it. We should keep in mind that diversity needs to be protected, also within academic discipline­s and institutio­ns, otherwise we reduce our capacity for dialogue and critique, leaving only mainstream approaches alive. Structural­ly the situation is similar in all Western countries. In the USA, tenure is hard to get, requiring considerab­le sacrifice from those who aspire to obtain it, without any guarantees. There ( and also in the UK) we risk creating strong hierarchie­s, with an academic upper class, that is well- protected and can enjoy its academic freedoms, while the teaching is done by those in precarious working conditions, without little hope for upward mobility.

But we shouldn’t forget the difference­s within the West, where Sweden isn’t the Czech republic. For instance, tenure is not used in many European countries, and academics have proper positions when they become faculty.

And more importantl­y, we shouldn’t forget the global south, where the situation for most academics is still far worse than in the West.

( The author is Professor in the Department of Economics and Media at Uppsala University, Sweden)

‘ Producing’ critical citizens or intellectu­als matters because, to quote E. Said, they can speak truth to power. Producing creative minds can bring about many things, and profit is only one of them.

MORE DOCTORATES IS WONDERFUL AS IT INCREASES THE KNOWLEDGE BASE OF SOCIETIES, BUT IT SIMULTANEO­USLY GENERATES AN OVERSUPPLY IN THE JOB MARKET

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