Occupational stress in University academics in Australia and New Zealand

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Lee, Megan
Coutts, Rosanne
Fielden, Jann
Hutchinson, Marie
Lakeman, Richard
Mathisen, Bernice
Nasrawi, Dima
Phillips, Nichole
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2021
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Abstract

Occupational stress has increased in higher education academic staff over several decades, and this has been particularly acute in Australia and New Zealand. This scoping review sought to understand the causes and impacts of occupational stress among Australian and New Zealand academics. Eight EBSCO databases were searched for key terms: academic and occupational stress and Australia and New Zealand. Twenty relevant papers were sourced, from which five common themes were extracted: (i) balancing an academic workload, (ii) casualisation of the workforce, (iii) the managerialism phenomenon, (iv) transition from field of practice to academia, and (v) academic and other staff. Further research in the Australian and New Zealand context is required to identify the nature of specific stressors and how these impact health and well-being.

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Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management

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This publication has been entered as an advanced online version in Griffith Research Online.

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Subject

Education systems

Specialist studies in education

Policy and administration

Social Sciences

Education & Educational Research

academics

occupational stress

higher education

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Lee, M; Coutts, R; Fielden, J; Hutchinson, M; Lakeman, R; Mathisen, B; Nasrawi, D; Phillips, N, Occupational stress in University academics in Australia and New Zealand, Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2021

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