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`Zealotry or nostalgic regret`? women leaders in technical and further education in Australia : agents of change, entrepreneurial educators or corporate citizens?

journal contribution
posted on 2003-01-01, 00:00 authored by Jillian BlackmoreJillian Blackmore, J Sachs
Education has been restructured in many Western post-industrial nation states during the 1990s. The Australian Technical and Further Education sector (TAFE) has been particularly susceptible to discourses of responsiveness to the market and the new entrepreneuralism. This article explores how women have been repositioned in contradictory and ambiguous ways as the new entrepreneurial middle managers by existing and emergent discourses that circulated in and through TAFE organizations. In turn, it points to how discourses of change management and client responsiveness took on particular readings within specific institutional and professional cultures of the eight Technical and Further Education institutions (TAFEs). At the same time, the restructuring that arose from the corporatization of TAFE, in a highly gendered process, through the twin strategies of marketization and the new managerialism produced new possibilities for individual women educators who moved up into middle management. Yet these individual women were positioned within highly masculinist 'neo-corporate bureaucratic cultures' that co-opted their passion for the capacity of education to make a difference and incorporated these new entrepeneurial work identities.

History

Journal

Gender, work & organization

Volume

10

Issue

4

Pagination

478 - 503

Publisher

Blackwell

Location

Oxford, England

ISSN

0968-6673

eISSN

1468-0432

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, Blackwell Publishing Ltd