Service organizations are encouraged to consider the manner in which employees perform at the customer/front‐line employee interface, as a means to gain competitive advantage. The employee's behaviour requires “emotional labour” where the front‐line employee (academic), has to either conceal or manage actual feelings for the benefit of a successful service delivery. The implication is not necessarily of equality or mutual benefit, but of satisfaction for the customer (student) and profit for the management. The paper discusses whether the academic is being exploited in this three‐way relationship. To illustrate this argument, data gathered from in‐depth interviews at a higher education institution are used. The research is of value as an aid for the management and support of academic staff in an age of managerialism and to the notion of the student as customer.
Article navigation
1 June 2004
Research Article|
June 01 2004
Higher education teachers and emotional labour Available to Purchase
Panikkos Constanti;
Panikkos Constanti
Senior Lecturer at Intercollege, Nicosia, Cyprus
Search for other works by this author on:
Paul Gibbs
Paul Gibbs
Dean of Research, at Intercollege, Nicosia, Cyprus
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6518
Print ISSN: 0951-354X
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
International Journal of Educational Management (2004) 18 (4): 243–249.
Citation
Constanti P, Gibbs P (2004), "Higher education teachers and emotional labour". International Journal of Educational Management, Vol. 18 No. 4 pp. 243–249, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09513540410538822
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Careers in overlapping institutional contexts: The case of academe
Career Development International (March,2005)
On reading: consumer advice in the library
Library Review (July,2007)
Top‐down management: an effective tool in higher education?
International Journal of Educational Management (January,2007)
Managerialism: a threat to professional librarianship?
Library Review (July,2007)
Related Chapters
Managerialism in Complex Systems: Experiences of Strategic Planning in Non-Profit Hospitals
Towards A Comparative Institutionalism: Forms, Dynamics And Logics Across The Organizational Fields Of Health Care And Higher Education
Chapter 4 Public Sector Management Trends in Brazil
Emerging and Potential Trends in Public Management: An Age of Austerity
Facilitating Supports and Services for Learners with Low-Incidence Disabilities
Including Learners with Low-Incidence Disabilities
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
