Abstract

ABSTRACT Changes in higher education internationally, including the corporatisation of universities, greater codification of research and teaching performance, and more precarious employment, have led to a chillier environment for academics. Employing an autoethnographic approach, we interrogate our career experiences as academic women and the important role our writing group has played in helping us navigate the competing calls on our time and energy, shape our careers, and heighten our career satisfaction. There are salient lessons about the value of adaptive group peer mentoring for those entering what is an increasingly uncertain academic environment.

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