ABSTRACT
This book is about experiences of sexual misconduct in the everyday spaces of academia and what and how we can learn from these experiences to inform an ethics of care in the university.
By bringing a wide range of lived experiences of students, staff and researchers out of their current marginalised positions within academic discussions, the book offers a deeper understanding of sexual misconduct in the academy for both students and staff. Each of the chapters offers not only opportunities for conversation and reflection, but addresses and suggests what responses to academic sexual misconduct could and should involve. By presenting collective accounts of experiencing, witnessing, researching and writing about sexual misconduct in academic spaces, Sexual Misconduct in Academia examines how to develop ethical pedagogical practices, if an ethics of care is to be truly implemented or transformed.
This book is suitable for students and scholars in Gender Studies, Education and Sociology.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|63 pages
The intersectionality of identities and recognition
chapter 3|15 pages
Uncovering gender disparity and sexual misconduct
chapter 4|21 pages
Whose power?
part II|71 pages
Fieldwork identities and pedagogy
chapter 6|17 pages
The unspoken experiences of ethnography
chapter 7|17 pages
‘No, you're not doing your research today. This is us spending some nice time together'
part III|36 pages
Disclosure, complaint and recognition
chapter 9|15 pages
Sexual misconduct in academic liminal spaces
part IV|46 pages
First responders and institutional support