Contingent Faculty Unionization: The Impact of Collective Bargaining on Course Pay, Benefits, and Contract Lengths for Part‐time Faculty at Four‐year Institutions in the U.S.
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LeFlore, Mary Alice
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Abstract
Contingent part‐time faculty experience far greater insecurity in their employment than
their full‐time and tenured colleagues, and may experience improvements to their working
situation as a result of collective bargaining by academic unions. Are these collective bargaining
efforts more effective when unions operate on behalf of a broader constituency, or are
outcomes better when unions concentrate on narrower interest groups? This study focused on
part‐time instructional faculty at four‐year institutions in the U.S. and considered four
employment outcomes that may be influenced by different types of union representation in
collective bargaining agreements with their academic employers: pay for courses taught, health
and retirement benefits, and contract length for teaching. Union membership criteria and
coalition operating strategy are both found to significantly influence these outcomes, with
higher course pay, greater odds for health and retirement benefits, and longer contract terms
generally associated with unions that include all types of faculty as members, rather than
representing part‐time instructors separately from others, and that choose to ally with other
unions in their efforts, rather than operate alone.
