Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T03:51:31.097Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

FIVE TIPS ON CONTINGENCY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2019

Isaac Kamola*
Affiliation:
Trinity College
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Spotlight: Empowering Contingent Faculty: Perspectives, Strategies, and Ideas
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 2019 

Most job-market advice received by political scientists begins by acknowledging the perils of un- and under-employment, then proceeds as if intensified professionalization and a more skillful approach to the job market is enough to avoid this unfortunate outcome (Carter and Scott Reference Carter and Scott1998; Miller and Gentry Reference Miller and Gentry2011; Saiya Reference Saiya2014). However, as demonstrated by many authors in this spotlight, contingency is now a reality experienced by many political scientists, no matter how hardworking or savvy. As such, it becomes important to develop strategies for navigating the all-too-common realities of academic contingency. Doing so helps cultivate networks of self-help and mutual solidarity, while publicly exposing and resisting the many indignities reproduced and normalized within an academy heavily dependent on contingent labor.

I entered the academic job market in 2008. After the financial crisis, half of the jobs I applied for ceased to exist after I submitted the applications. This dire economic situation—from which the academy has not recovered—meant that my partner and I set out on a multiyear circuit of postdocs and unemployed “visiting-scholar” positions. We lived in five cities in five years; one year, we filed taxes in four different states. We got really good at packing and unpacking an apartment. Over time, I developed a list of practical advice to pass along to fellow travelers who were just entering the unsettling postgraduate world of applying for jobs, teaching in new and random places, and imagining a thousand possible (but unlikely) futures. I developed these five tips during our years of vagabondage:

  1. 1. Set your own wage. I decided not to work for less than $20 an hour. One school paid me $3,200 per course, which meant I could spend only 160 hours on that class. I used an Excel spreadsheet to track the time spent teaching, preparing, grading, holding office hours, and responding to email. By the end of the semester, I had only enough hours to either prepare for class or grade final papers, so I taught the last classes without prepping them. The school got what it paid for—and I earned $20 an hour.

  2. 2. CVs are editable documents. Given that many employers consciously or unconsciously discriminate against those in contingent positions, avoiding full disclosure is often advantageous. Because no crime of omission exists with CVs, when teaching at multiple institutions, I find it perfectly reasonable to list only one school per year. List only the more prestigious school, and/or the job title most easily misinterpreted as a full-time position. After all, the many academics working in restaurants to pay the bills do not list “Food Service” as their current position.

  3. 3. The job market is a cartel. Don’t let it consume you. No greater waste of time exists than the academic job market. (Actually, let’s refrain from calling it a “market”; it is a buyer’s cartel with purchasers of labor enjoying a near monopoly.) Yet, it remains seductive to imagine that pouring countless hours into tweaking the minutia of an application will make the difference in landing that dream job. I once spent a whole day tinkering an application for a job I later learned was an inside hire, one that needed a national search only for window dressing.

    Because the cartel wants only publications, maximizing writing time is imperative. This requires limiting the hours sacrificed to the application-process abyss. For me, I limited my job applications to Mondays, when I would scour recent job postings, download relevant ads, update spreadsheets, tweak cover letters, modify materials, upload documents, and make the occasional mad dash to the post office. On Monday evening, I set it all aside until the following week. Also, avoid the gossip blogs; nothing good comes from that nonsense.

    No greater waste of time exists than the academic job market. (Actually, let’s refrain from calling it a “market”; it is a buyer’s cartel with purchasers of labor enjoying a near monopoly.)

  4. 4. Not all tenure-track jobs are worth taking. The sense of desperation that accompanies applying for academic jobs often culminates in a reflexive impulse to accept any full-time job that comes along, no matter how poorly paid, overworked, or dislocating. However, depending on the circumstance, not taking a job might open more possibilities than accepting one that would prove personally, emotionally, and economically debilitating. Some tenure-track positions actually create fewer openings and possibilities than, say, staying another year in your graduate program or picking up a few classes in a location where your research will be supported by proximity to talks, libraries, mentors, and friends. Sometimes simply rolling the dice again makes the most sense.

  5. 5. Don’t make life wait. The normalization of academic contingency means that we often put major life decisions—forming meaningful romantic relationships, getting married, and having children—on hold. If hard work actually guaranteed secure, lasting employment, then delaying such decisions for one’s career might make sense. However, in this industry, no such guarantees exist. I recommend having an academic plan but also cultivating a “Plan B”—one in which things other than the academy take priority. Use this Plan B to measure what is being sacrificed and whether those sacrifices are actually worth it.

Self-care and survival tips, of course, take us only so far. Faculty caught navigating contingency should receive solidarity from all faculty, including those in tenured and tenure-track positions. Our profession needs frank and public conversations about academic labor and the sacrifices we, our friends, and our colleagues are required to make. We should organize against the hierarchies and indignities that have become the grinding norm in securing academic employment. Departments, disciplines, and professional organizations should take the lead in making the training and hiring process more humane. Moreover, seizing the problem at its root, we must organize and unionize to resist those underlying economic trends driving expanded contingency.

Acknowledgments

I thank Veronica Czastkiewicz, Susan Orr, and three anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful and immensely helpful comments.

References

REFERENCES

Carter, Ralph G., and Scott, James M.. 1998. “Navigating the Academic Job Market Minefield.” PS: Political Science & Politics 31 (3): 615–22.Google Scholar
Miller, William J., and Gentry, Bobbi. 2011. “Navigating the Academic Job Market in Treacherous Times.” PS: Political Science & Politics 44 (3): 578–82.Google Scholar
Saiya, Nilay. 2014. “Navigating the International Academic Job Market.” PS: Political Science & Politics 47 (4): 845–48.Google Scholar