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El. knyga: Healthy Relationships in Higher Education: Promoting Wellbeing Across Academia

Edited by (Edith Cowan University, Australia)

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"Self-care involves taking action to support, protect or maintain wellbeing. Relationships have a significant influence on these acts of self-care and one's sense of wellbeing. Relationships are fundamental to individual meaning-making and crucial to theworld of academia. In this edited collection, authors navigate how they view relationships as a crucial part of their wellbeing and acts of self-care, exploring the "I", "We" and "Us" at the centre of self-care and wellbeing embodiment. Each chapter unpacks this idea in varying ways that demonstrate that relationships are a fundamental element of both work and personal life and how they intersect with wellbeing. The authors present critical discussion through visual narratives, lived experiences and strategies that highlight how relationships, seeking social support, scaffolding opportunities to learn with and from each other, and changes in practise become acts of self-care individually and collectively. There has arguably never been a more important time to raise awareness of self-care and wellbeing as central to the nature of work in higher education. Healthy Relationships in Higher Education: Promoting Wellbeing Across Academia highlights new ways of working in higher education that disrupt current tensions that neglect wellbeing and will be of interest to anyone working in this environment"--

In this edited collection, authors navigate how they view relationships as a crucial part of their wellbeing and acts of self-care, exploring the "I", "We" and "Us" at the centre of self-care and wellbeing embodiment.



Self-care involves taking action to support, protect or maintain wellbeing. Relationships have a significant influence on these acts of self-care and one’s sense of wellbeing. Relationships are fundamental to individual meaning-making and crucial to the world of academia.

In this edited collection, authors navigate how they view relationships as a crucial part of their wellbeing and acts of self-care, exploring the "I", "We" and "Us" at the centre of self-care and wellbeing embodiment. Each chapter unpacks this idea in varying ways that demonstrate that relationships are a fundamental element of both work and personal life and how they intersect with wellbeing. The authors present critical discussion through visual narratives, lived experiences and strategies that highlight how relationships, seeking social support, scaffolding opportunities to learn with and from each other, and changes in practise become acts of self-care individually and collectively.

There has arguably never been a more important time to raise awareness of self-care and wellbeing as central to the nature of work in higher education. Healthy Relationships in Higher Education: Promoting Wellbeing Across Academia highlights new ways of working in higher education that disrupt current tensions that neglect wellbeing and will be of interest to anyone working in this environment.

1. Vulnerability, self-care and the relationship with us and others in
higher education Section
1. The intertwined relationship between us, we and I
2. Creative and Collaborative Expression as Contemplative Self-care
3. "A
Stitch in Time": Scholar-Activism as Resistance/Disruption, Method, and
Self-Care Practice
4. The Ripple Effect of Social Support in Academia
5.
Creating a sense of belonging through self-care strategies in higher
education Section
2. Fostering connections
6. Building Belonging: A
Grassroots Peer-support Network for Academic Women
7. Alamus: Singing
together for self-care and wellbeing within higher education context
8.
Seeing Past the Mask: Rejuvenating Academia through Art Based Self-Care
9.
Creating care-full conditions is institutional work: Research developers as
campus earthworms
10. Table chats: Research relations and the impact on our
wellbeing as academics Section
3. Relationship with self
11. From Survival To
Self-care: Performative Professionalism and the Self in the Neoliberal
University
12. Lessons from the Trickster: Be Present. Be Empathetic. (Be
Love). Be Playful
13. Discovering the InnerOuter Self in a Time of Endings
and a Time of Beginnings
14. Recovering Care for Past Publications: An
Exercise in Vocation
15. Authenticity and wellbeing in neoliberal times:
Imagining alternatives.
Narelle Lemon is an interdisciplinary researcher in her fields of education, positive psychology and arts, holding the position of Associate Professor in Education at Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia. Narelle is a researcher who focuses on translating theory and evidence into practice to enhance engagement and participation for teachers and students across all fields of education. Recent research has investigated mindfulness in education, self-care and wellbeing to empower educators, arts and cultural education, and her award-winning scholarship of learning and teaching in the integration of social media for learning and professional development.