The number of workers taking strike action has risen this year, up from record lows for a decade. University workers are a part of this movement, reports Jonathan Strauss.
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU)
A delegation of unionists travelled to the Pilliga forest, in Northern NSW, in solidarity withthe Gomeroi people resisting Santos' Narrabri coal seam gas mining operation. Jim McIlroy reports.
National Tertiary Education Union members at the University of Technology Sydneystruck for improved pay and better job security for a half day. Jim McIlroy reports.
Universityof Sydney NTEUmembers told Jim McIlroy on the picket line that the “big battle” is with a management that wants to “take away long-standing staff rights and entitlements”.
National Tertiary Education Union members went onstrike at the University of Newcastle and UTS for job security, manageable workloads, fair pay and for casuals to be given permanent contracts. Steve O'Brien and Kerry Smith report.
Progressive, grassroots activism was the winner in tightly contested elections for the NTEUBranch Committee and National Council elections at the University of Sydney. Markela Panegyres reports.
Charles Sturt University will repay millions in unpaid wages to current and former casual staff, in a life-changing win for casual employees. Susan Price reports.
While university managements are boastinghuge surpluses, they are refusing to make theirlargely casualisedstaff permanent and award them pay rises. Binoy Kampmark reports.
Staff and students picketedthe University of Sydneyin their fourth strike day this year in support of a fair enterprise agreement. Jim McIlroy reports.
National Tertiary Education Union members at the University of Sydney are gearing up for a 24-hour strike as part of their push for an improved enterprise agreement. Jim McIlroy reports.
Rank-and-file members of the National Tertiary Education Union at the University of Sydney have launched a ticket for the August union elections. Jim McIlroy reports.
First Nations people have historically been excluded from Australian universities. Even so-called“sandstone universities” were built on a foundation of invasion, genocide and land theft, writesMarkela Panegyres.
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