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Hope theory as resistance: narratives of South Asian scholars in Australian academia

Version 2 2025-05-05, 06:13
Version 1 2024-03-06, 22:12
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-05, 06:13 authored by N Sum, R Lahiri-Roy, N Belford
PurposeIdentity, positioning and possibilities intersect differently for South Asian women in white academia. Within a broader migrant community that defines Australian life, these identities and positioning imply great possibility, but pursuing such pathways within academia is a walk on the last strand of resilience. This paper explores this tension of possibilities and constraints, using hope theory to highlight the cognitive resistance evident in the narratives of three South Asian women in Australian academia.Design/methodology/approachThe authors use collaborative autoethnography to share their narratives of working in Australian universities at three different stages of careers, utilising Snyder's model of hope theory to interrogate their own goal-setting behaviours, pathways and agentic thinking.FindingsThe authors propose that hope as a cognitive state informs resistance and enables aspirations to contribute within academia in meaningful ways whilst navigating the terrain of inequitable structures.Originality/valueThe authors' use of hope theory as a lens on the intersectional experiences of career making, building and progression is a new contribution to scholarship on marginalised women in white academe and the ways in which the pathways of resistance are identified.

History

Journal

Equality, Diversity and Inclusion

Volume

44

Pagination

26-40

Location

Bingley, Eng.

Open access

  • No

ISSN

2040-7149

eISSN

1758-7093

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Emerald

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