Ivory Basement Leadership
By (Author) Joan Eveline
UWA Publishing
UWA Publishing
1st August 2004
Australia
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
658.4
Paperback
259
Width 139mm, Height 207mm
Many people fear that the ivory tower is crumbling. Of urgent concern are deteriorating standards, fewer jobs, waning professional prestige and new layers of inequity. Leadership in the tower is easy to spot. It is hierarchical, detached and mostly male. In this highly readable book, Joan Eveline turns her acute gaze to the ivory basement, where the corridors, departments, laboratories and offices are peopled. There she observes a greedy organisation cannibalising the efforts, energy and care of the basement's workers, most of whom are women. Voices from the basement - of The University of Western Australia, but it could be any university - speak about the devaluing of their work. Eveline detects a new linkage, through shared experience, of administrative staff, research assistants and the lower order of academics, who increasingly are casual workers. And she discerns a courageous and almost invisible exercise of leadership. This 'post-heroic' leadership values personal relationship (one aspect of which is teaching), loyalty and diversity. It is creative, flexible and, above all, collaborative. Ivory Basement Leadership will hearten those dismayed by the restructuring pandemic. For ivory basement workers have, in adversity, forged a leadership model that might well be mobilised to revive our ailing universities.