糖心Vlog

Irish postgraduate researchers set to strike for staff status

Other universities could follow Trinity and announce action, says union president

Published on
January 30, 2024
Last updated
February 1, 2024
Man walking past the famine remembrance statues in Dublin
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PhD students across Ireland are tipped to聽take industrial action in a聽bid to聽force their conversion to聽staff status.

Doctoral candidates at Trinity College Dublin have made the first move, announcing that they are preparing to go on聽strike. 鈥淲orkers鈥 rights and an聽employment-based model is聽the only way forward for postgraduate research programmes,鈥 the Trinity branch of the Postgraduate Workers Organisation (PWO) , formerly Twitter.

鈥淲e ask that Trinity College takes responsibility for the wellbeing of [the] college community and stand[s] for the rights and human dignity of their [postgraduate researchers].鈥

In an open letter to provost Linda Doyle and university governors, the Trinity branch said the organisation had distributed petitions, held mass protests and published open letters in an effort to enact change. 鈥淲e would rather not have to strike, but are ultimately prepared to聽do,鈥 the letter read.

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Conor Reddy, president of the national Postgraduate Workers Organisation of Ireland, told 糖心Vlog that the Trinity branch was likely to be the first of many PWO branches to strike.

鈥淭his will be a nationwide push towards escalating levels of collective action,鈥 he said. The union was still deciding on a deadline for the university to respond, he added.

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In 2023, Trinity raised stipends for its internally funded postgraduate schemes to 鈧25,000 (拢21,300), , impacting about 15聽per cent of the university鈥檚 PhD population. After a national review into state support for PhD researchers advised that these stipends should also be increased to 鈧25,000, the higher education minister, Simon Harris, that those funded by Science Foundation Ireland and the Irish Research Council would rise by 鈧3,000, to聽鈧22,000.

Still, many postgraduate researchers are struggling financially on stipends lower than minimum wage, Mr Reddy said, amid a 鈥渄ire housing crisis鈥 stemming from soaring rents. 鈥淚聽think that absolutely saps the passion people have for pursuing PhD research, and careers in research after they finish,鈥 he said.

Staff status would ensure that PhD researchers receive the national minimum wage, he said, as well as gaining access to parental and sick leave. Researchers from outside the European Union were particularly disadvantaged by student status, Mr Reddy noted, with increased tuition fees, mandatory health insurance and visa renewal costs all adding financial pressure.

PhD researchers鈥 student status causes Ireland to 鈥渓ose talent, because the time spent doing a PhD doesn鈥檛 count towards residency or citizenship requirements鈥, Mr Reddy said. 鈥淓ven universities are expressing their worries about recruitment of PhDs in Ireland, particularly international PhDs.

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鈥淎 growing number of European countries are turning towards employment-based models for PhDs,鈥 he continued. 鈥淚f Trinity were to say it supported such a move, I聽think that would make a big difference on the national level.鈥

Countries including Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden currently recognise PhD candidates as聽staff, while the University and College Union has called for similar practices to be adopted in the聽UK.

Last year, however, UK聽Research and Innovation said PhD candidates were 鈥渙ften best supported to pursue their ideas as students without an employment contract鈥.

A Trinity spokeswoman said that it had already made 鈥渁 number of significant policy changes鈥 relating to postgraduates, including introducing a plan for research students to take 30 days鈥 leave each year.

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鈥淪ome of the concerns raised by the PWO are sectoral challenges and outside the control of individual institutions. Through the Irish Universities Association (IUA) and in partnership with other universities, we have advocated strongly for a resolution of challenges including payment to students on maternity leave,鈥 the spokeswoman said.

鈥淭he IUA believes it essential that a national minimum PhD stipend level is set, and is working with government, and other stakeholders to achieve this.鈥

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emily.dixon@timeshighereducation.com

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