Creating more inclusive workplaces for academics with energy limiting conditions
Report from University of Liverpool on academics with energy limiting conditions and how to support them.
Published : 24/11/2025
Home » Academics with Energy Limiting Conditions
“The Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated levels of burnout in UK academia. High levels of exhaustion, however, pre-date the pandemic, shaped by decades of marketisation, heightened competition, and increased use of precarious and casualised employment.”
“The political economy of higher education is characterised by capitalist hyperproductivity and neoliberalisation and it both produces debilitated bodies- and excludes many disabled people. For disabled academics, systemic ableism continues to impact job retention and career progression (Horton and Tucker, 2014). Only 5% of academic staff have disclosed a disability (HESA, 2022) and only 1% of UKRI grants went to disabled PIs in 2019-20 (UKRI, 2021). These are not disconnected phenomenon, “in an age when even the “well” buckle under the demands of academia, the chronically ill or disabled are rarely able to jump the hurdles required” (Rees, 2021, p. 27).”
The team from University of Liverpool, comprising Prof Bethan Evans, Dr Alison Allam, Dr Amy Ruddock and Catherine Hale, conducted the largest research study to date on the experiences of academics with energy limiting conditions (ELCs) – 239 in-depth surveys, 22 interviews, and 2 focus groups.
View their Main Guidance Document here. “This main guidance document has all the core information about the research and key findings, along with recommendations for: academics with ELC, line managers, HR professionals, union and EDI representatives, conference organisers and publishers. If you find this guidance useful, please let the team know via this form so that they can keep track of impact: ELC guidance feedback – Fill in form“
For Funders
“This document contains specific guidance on how funders can help improve the accessibility of research funding for academics with ELC. This guidance can also be used to improve accessibility for university internal funding schemes. If you find this guidance useful, please let the team know via this form so that they can keep track of impact: ELC guidance feedback – Fill in form “
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