UCU lecturers on strike back in 2008 (Photo by: Lewis Whyld / PA Archive)
At the beginning of May, 65 percent of the members of lecturers' union the Universities and Colleges Union (UCU), voted for strike action today and tomorrow [Wednesday and Thursday]. Their main grievance relates to pay – they've only been offered a 1.1 per cent pay increase this year. Their wages have affectively decreased by as much as 15 per cent over the past decade when you take inflation into account. But another of their demands highlights a more pernicious aspect of British universities today; the use of casualised and "zero hour" contracts.
I spoke to Victoria Blake, chair of the UCU's anti-casualisation campaign. A former academic herself, Victoria left the profession two years ago after suffering a self-described breakdown. "In retrospect," Vicky says, "my breakdown had been coming for a while. I woke up one day and I couldn't go to work, I just started crying. I'd been having issues with stress and heart palpitations.""I was working seven different zero hours contracts at two universities," she says. "I had teaching jobs, research assistant jobs and other academic related contracts all at the same time. I was working 70 hours a week but being paid for fewer than 40 of those. I was on less than minimum wage when I worked it out once." Poor pay is something felt particularly acutely by women in the sector. The average shortfall faced by female academics was £6,103 a year, and the gender gap is another reason for today's strike.I woke up one day and I couldn't go to work, I just started crying.
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