At every stage of her academic career, Sunny Singh has been âpretty much the only woman of colour in my areaâ. In her 15 years working in UK higher education, the internationally acclaimed author and senior lecturer in creative writing and English literature at London Metropolitan University has been the only ethnic minority woman in her department, bar a couple of temporary members of staff.
While initiatives aimed at widening participation mean that student populations in the UK are much more diverse than they were 20 years ago, there has not been the same level of progress for black and minority ethnic scholars in the academic workforce.
The result, according to Dr Singh, who was born in India, is that the few BAME female scholars in the academy âtake on pastoral duties and responsibilitiesâ that go way beyond the requirements of their job.
âWeâve especially got lots of young women of colour now going into higher educationâŠBut theyâre experiencing internal aggressions and microaggressions, plus all the issues that come with being a student,â she said. âSo who do they come to when they have problems? The one person who kind of looks like them.â
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The dearth of ethnic minority women in academia means that Dr Singh even supports students who are not at her institution.
âIâve had multiple conversations in the past week with students at other universities who either email me or DM [direct message] me on Twitter saying: âWe know youâre a visible woman of colour in higher education, can we talk?â Yes, itâs not âmy jobâ. Iâm not paid for it. But if I am one of the few people they can go to in this industry, I canât say: âNo, sorry, itâs 5pm.â Youâre there,â she said.
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âI donât teach at Oxford, and IÂ donât teach kids who are walking in with everything sorted for them. My students need every last bit of our work. But unless the [institutional] structures, unless the industry can understand what IÂ do, which it doesnât, IÂ will be penalised.â
Dr Singh is not alone. Research from across the world suggests that female ethnic minority academics routinely face additional challenges that other colleagues do not and also take on extra labour, often without recognition â a burden that can have a detrimental impact on their career progression and their mental health.
A 2019 report released by the University and College Union, drawing on interviews with 20 black female professors in the UK, found that these scholars faced a culture of âpassive bullying and racial microaggressionsâ that narrowed their chances of promotion.
A mixed-race associate professor in the UK, who wished to remain anonymous, said she was often asked by her university to speak on panels or to participate in diversity initiatives because of her ethnic background, but such work was not rewarded.
âYou donât get any credit for it in any way. Itâs not remunerated. You donât get a lower workload. You donât get any points. Itâs considered âgood citizenshipâ in the institution,â she said.
Having found herself âoverwhelmed with workâ, she started to decline such invitations, she went on. However, her manager pushed back, arguing that the additional activities were âreally importantâ and might not be properly addressed without her expertise.
âI felt that, in a way, it was making me feel guilty for something that really is not my responsibility,â she said. âMy colleagues of colour at the institution Iâm at and elsewhere are constantly telling me these kinds of things. They ask you to be on diversity panels, and if you say ânoâ they make you feel guilty and [tell you such efforts are needed or] change wonât happen. [Yet] if you are on those panels, it doesnât get recognised.â
The academic explained that an additional burden is that âpart of surviving as a person of colour in these predominantly white spaces is building solidarity networksâ of colleagues who will âstick up for you or point issues outâ. However, it âtakes a long time to do thatâ, and it is âhard to then be selfishly oriented towards doing your research, which is what you actually get promoted on primarilyâ, she added.
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âEveryone of colour that I know in academia is just totally exhaustedâŠThereâs a real culture of exploitation, I think, in terms of emotional commitment to the institution and its promise of progress.â
A south Asian academic, who also asked not to be named, said BAME academics tend not to be put forward as PhD supervisors by managers, which makes it difficult for these scholars to be promoted.
âExclusions are probably made in âgood faithâ. But if your expertise is completely disregarded and even the supervisions you have expertise in are handed over to white colleagues who donât speak up, that is another form of exclusion and impacts your career,â she said.
âItâs also an accumulative process. When you have students who see that the academicâs own colleagues in the department are dismissive of their qualifications and expertise, why should they take you seriously?â
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A black British scholar who resigned from her university last year over her treatment by managers said she had taken on additional duties to help the institution tackle the BAME attainment or awarding gap, but the tasks had not been properly accounted for in her work plan. She was âthe only female academic of colour and also the only Muslim academicâ in her department.
âI was also on a lower [pay] grade than colleagues with less qualifications and experience than IÂ had, even though IÂ was carrying out significant leadership responsibilities. When IÂ asked when IÂ would be ready for a regrade in terms of progression, the goalposts kept moving. IÂ was told IÂ had to be here for two years, and then for three years and then for four years,â she said.
She said she had been interviewed for âa secondment with a focus on the awarding gapâ, and had been told that she was âby far the best candidateâ. However, the university then announced that the role was no longer available.
âI was contacted a couple of days after, asking whether I would be interested in doing some research staying at the same grade I am at but doing work that was in the role that was originally advertised,â the academic said.
âBecause research is required in terms of progression, I accepted thatâŠ[But] my head of department actively blocked me from taking the research opportunity, saying they couldnât afford for me to be moved out of teaching. It was not the first time that my head of department had actively blocked me from taking on research responsibilities. There was a really significant glass ceiling that was placed and was preventing me from progressing.â
The scholar said the majority of BAME female academics she has spoken to have âeither left academia because of toxic working environments or moved institutionsâŠbecause they found they werenât able to progress where they were basedâ.
âItâs academics at all levels â early career academics who are leaving academia all the way through to black female professors who have really worked hard to navigate their way through but are now seeing that even as professors theyâre encountering the same level of prejudice,â she added.
Dr Singh observed that for ethnic minority scholars, even the decision of whether to leave an institution or quit academia altogether carries extra considerations that weigh on their conscience.
âIf I walk away, thatâs one fewer woman of colour on faculty. That is one fewer person [students] can seeâŠSo itâs not just a professional dilemma. For me, itâs a moral dilemma. That adds to the labour,â she said.
The only way Dr Singh sees this changing is if universities recruit more BAME faculty.
âHire a wider group of people, pay us equally, promote us so that we stay on rather than leave because we burn out, and empower us to make the changes that the industry needs. Thatâs the starting point,â she said.
âBeyond that, I think the sector needs a real reckoning over what we want our universities to doâŠIf it is to serve the elite, then any diversity initiative is basically eyewash.â
ellie.bothwell@timeshighereducation.com

In numbers
Despite small advances in recent years, the academic workforce in the UK is still overwhelmingly white â and, at senior levels, male. Just 2.3Â per cent of professors are BAME women, according to the latest figures from Advance HE (based on the 2017-18 academic year), while 7.7Â per cent are BAME men, and 23.6Â per cent are white women. Two-thirds (66.3Â per cent) are white men.
Ethnic minority academics are even less represented at the senior management level. Just 1.5Â per cent of senior managers at UK universities are BAME women, while 3.6Â per cent are BAME men.
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Overall, BAME women make up 6.8Â per cent of all staff at UK universities.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: BAME women bear extra burdens
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