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Negotiating in Silence: Experiences with Parental Leave in Academia

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Negotiating in Silence: Experiences with Parental Leave in Academia
Abstract
This paper presents a case study of pregnancy/parental leave arrangements among faculty members at a mid-sized Canadian University from 2000-2010. The data show that leave arrangements were very inconsistent across faculties, across and within departments, and even for individual faculty members who had taken more than one leave. The majority of problematic cases were instances where a faculty member began or ended a leave in the middle of an academic term. Without specific language in their collective agreement, these faculty members often negotiated circumstances that carried individual penalties for duties that were unassigned in light of the leave. This research has implications for unions who must be particularly vigilant and active in professional environments where individual negotiation takes place and union consciousness is lower. It also emphasizes the burden placed on parents when the bearing and rearing of children is framed as an individual right rather than an issue of social reproduction. The paper uses data from a sample of collective agreements across Canadian universities to make recommendations to clarify the procedures for pregnancy and parental leave.
Publication
Relations Industrielles
Volume
67
Issue
3
Pages
352-374
Date
Summer 2012
Language
English
ISSN
0034379X
Short Title
Negotiating in Silence
Accessed
3/25/15, 3:47 PM
Library Catalog
ProQuest
Rights
Copyright Universite Laval - Departement des Relations Industrielles Summer 2012
Citation
Weststar, J. (2012). Negotiating in Silence: Experiences with Parental Leave in Academia. Relations Industrielles, 67(3), 352–374. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/2012/v67/n3/index.html