Examining the impact of Covid-19 on the working lives of business, management, and economics鈥� academics in the UK
A summary and update of the carried out in early 2020 .

Examining the impact of Covid-19 on the working lives of business, management, and economics鈥� academics in UK
Within a short timeframe the Covid-19 pandemic has had a profound effect on the nature of working lives across the globe. Governments have responded by total or partial lockdowns to promote social distancing, and this has necessitated remote working. The Higher Education (HE) sector is a key sector of the UK economy generating 拢38.2 billion in income in 2017-18 and is also a major employer with significant links to other sectors. Although each sector operates in a specific context, studying HE has wider implications for the UK as a whole. First, the sector has been largely able to continue operating in a digital context and in this respect, it provides a large working sample of remote work. Second, there are implications for the wider education and training domain beyond HE, such as market research and primary and secondary education. In addition, there are implications for other sectors where online research plays an important role, such as various manufacturing and service sectors.
The group ran a in early 2020 and obtained a rich sample of responses from over 2,000 scholars. The subsequent report on the consultation was provided to participants and was widely disseminated to the 91视频地址下载school community via the UK and international accreditation bodies (Chartered Association of Business Schools and AACSB鈥檚 BizEd) as well more widely through the Times Higher Education (鈥溾€� (11/01/2021) and 鈥溾€�), and other stakeholders in the sector.
In the second half of 2021, two research outputs are to be published examining 鈥�鈥� in Research Policy and 鈥榯he effects of the COVID-19 鈥榣ockdown鈥� on teaching and engagement in UK Business Schools鈥� (forthcoming with a working paper version being available at ). A working paper examining job insecurity and work engagement, and how uneven access to research resources is undermining interdisciplinary research is currently under review, and further preliminary work is being drafted exploring how the move on-line has impacted collaborations.
To enrich the evidence base for policy on flexible working, we are now conducting a follow up survey that we hope will enable us to obtain a rich understanding of long-lasting effects on the lives of academics. We are also looking at the impact of the other important event that came to pass in 2020, Brexit. We are extremely grateful to survey participants who have generously supported the project in what was for many a taxing period.
Lead - James T. Walker
Team - Chris Brewster, Rita Fontinha, Washika Haak-Saheem, Fabio Lamperti, and