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“Life is based on reciprocity, so be generous”: ethical work in doctoral acknowledgements

Barbara M. Grant (School of Critical Studies in Education, Faculty of Education and Social Work, Waipapa Taumata Rau/University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand)
Machi Sato (Center for Promotion of Excellence in Higher Education, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan)
Jules Skelling (School of Education, Faculty of Culture and Society, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand)

Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education

ISSN: 2398-4686

Article publication date: 27 September 2022

Issue publication date: 4 October 2022

98

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to explore doctoral candidates’ ethical work in writing the acknowledgements section of their theses. With interest in the formation of academic identities/subjectivities, the authors explore acknowledgements writing as always potentially a form of parrhesia or risky truth-telling, through which the candidate places themselves in their relations to others rather than in their claims to knowledge (Luxon, 2008).

Design/methodology/approach

Doctoral candidates from all faculties in one Japanese and one Aotearoa New Zealand university participated in focus groups where they discussed the genre of thesis acknowledgements, drafted their own version and wrote a reflective commentary/backstory.

Findings

Viewing the backstories through the lens of parrhesia (with its entangled matters of frankness, truth, risk, criticism and duty) showed candidates engaged in complex ethical decision-making processes with, at best, “ambiguous ethical resources” (Luxon, 2008, p. 381) arising from their academic and personal lives. Candidates used these resources to try and position themselves as both properly academic and more than academic – as knowing selves and relational selves.

Originality/value

This study bares the ethical riskiness of writing doctoral acknowledgements, as doctoral candidates navigate the tensions between situating themselves “truthfully” in their relations with others while striking the necessary pose of intellectual independence (originality). In a context where there is evidence that examiners not only read acknowledgements to ascertain independence, student and/or supervisor quality and the “human being behind the thesis” (Kumar and Sanderson, 2020, p. 285) but also show bias in those readings, this study advises reader caution about drawing inferences from acknowledgements texts. They are not simply transparent. As examiners and other readers make sense, judgments even, of these tiny, often fascinating, glimpses into a candidate’s doctoral experience, they need to understand that a host of unpredictable tensions with myriad ambiguous effects are present on the page.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors’ gratitude to the wider research team for the acknowledgements of past and present projects: Frances Kelly, Catherine Manathunga and Cally Guerin.

Funding: This work was supported by the Research Institute of Higher Education, Hiroshima University, Japan (2017–2018).

Citation

Grant, B.M., Sato, M. and Skelling, J. (2022), "“Life is based on reciprocity, so be generous”: ethical work in doctoral acknowledgements", Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education, Vol. 13 No. 3, pp. 315-330. https://doi.org/10.1108/SGPE-12-2021-0082

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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