On 20 September, the National Labor Relations Board announced a to reverse , a 2016 ruling establishing that teaching, research and laboratory assistants at private research universities in the US are statutory employees with collective bargaining rights. Graduate student labour unions have responded with thousands of public comments urging the board to preserve Columbia. Groups such as the and the have also weighed in, claiming that the new rule downplays graduate students鈥 economic activity and thus their right to federal labour protections. University administrations, on the other hand, are welcoming the board鈥檚 reversal. The proposed rule echoes their common argument that graduate students are and therefore not proper bearers of federal labour protections.
At the same time, reports about graduate students鈥 deteriorating mental health are multiplying. observers are about a graduate school mental health . A shows that graduate students suffer disproportionately from severe mental health problems, particularly anxiety and depression. For example, a 2018 Nature survey across 26 countries and 234 institutions scored in the moderate-to-severe depression range. 鈥淭he prevalence of depression and anxiety symptoms among Economics PhD students鈥,聽, 鈥渋s comparable to the prevalence found in incarcerated populations.鈥 And the .
Compounding the problem, on-campus mental health services are already struggling to deal with the increasing mental health needs of their . 鈥淯niversity student mental health care鈥,聽, 鈥渋s at the tipping point.鈥 Counsellors, overburdened with mounting caseloads, are starting to . For graduate students, the combination of increasing need and decreasing access to care is indeed a without a foreseeable end.
While unionisation and the graduate student mental health crisis may seem like unrelated issues, we want to draw on a variety of research to argue that the two are intimately connected. Graduate student unionisation, we conclude, needs to be fundamentally reframed as a mental health issue. Having graduate-student-led labour unions at all US research universities, private and public, is a necessary (though not sufficient) condition for solving the graduate school mental health crisis.
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Social scientists have been studying the across groups for decades. They refer to this as 鈥, a complex, dynamic expression of the fact that 鈥渘o matter how strongly we perceive ourselves as autonomous entities emphasising our individuality, our affective states are linked with those of our fellow human beings鈥.
Three recent articles show that stress travels across groups. found that 10 to 40 per cent of research subjects exhibited 鈥渇ull-blown鈥 hormonal stress responses when they observe others who are experiencing stress, resulting in "significant potential negative consequences鈥n everyday life鈥. observed similar effects in elementary schoolchildren with stressed-out teachers, highlighting, in the authors鈥 words, 鈥渢he importance of preventing teacher burnout and promoting well-being among teachers by offering the necessary support, resources, and professional development opportunities teachers may need鈥. The found that 鈥渋ndividuals can detect stress in others, even in the absence of overt context-dependent stress cues" such as a stressful topic of conversation, and "have cardiac responses that are related to those of the speaker鈥.
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What about anxiety and depression? found that depressive symptoms in individuals are strongly correlated with friends鈥 and neighbours鈥 depression levels. 鈥淭his association鈥, the authors note, 鈥渆xtended up to three degrees of separation (to one鈥檚 friends鈥 friends鈥 friends)鈥, concluding that depression 鈥渃an be observed to travel along social networks鈥.聽
In light of all this, the most effective intervention strategy would be to treat the problem on a universal scale. So far, however, universities have tended to focus on small-scale strategies for coping with the fact that 鈥. 鈥溾, a term imported from corporate environments, is now the watchword of graduate education. Proponents of this small-scale strategy advise universities to organise stress-management workshops and thesis-writing support groups, foster public discussions about mental health and encourage students to talk to each other about therapy.
For example, that departments improve their internal culture through initiatives such as encouraging students to do meaningful and useful work, showing more concern for student well-being and success, destigmatising failure, communicating clearly and frequently with students and 鈥渆ncourag[ing] brainstorming of creative ways that students and faculty can support each other鈥.
A on doctoral students鈥 well-being confirms that 鈥渃ultural change鈥 is the prominent approach to the problem. 鈥淎lmost all鈥 the studies emphasise the need for 鈥渄eveloping optimal resistance strategies to enhance well-being鈥. These include: 鈥渢eaching doctoral students to affirm themselves daily and develop positive thinking patterns鈥, implementing 鈥渁cademic climate or discrimination鈥 policies, 鈥渇ostering peer groups鈥 and organising seminars on time management. While we acknowledge the value of self-care, changing departmental culture and nurturing positive interpersonal relationships, in our view this small-scale, 鈥渃ultural change鈥 approach fails to acknowledge two core facts about the graduate school mental health crisis:聽first, graduate students and their relationships are embedded in a broader ; and second, this work and organisational context has a significant impact on graduate student mental health.

A recent study by Belgian social scientists finds that 鈥渨ork and organizational context鈥 has a significant causal bearing on graduate student mental health. They apply an organisational health framework to PhD students in Flanders, premised on the notion that environmental factors contribute significantly to individuals鈥 stress and well-being.
Previous organisational health research, the authors note, 鈥渇ind[s] significant emotional costs when job control is low鈥, identifies 鈥渢he interplay between work and home [as] a significant potential source of stress impacting mental health鈥 and shows that 鈥渨orkers鈥 participation in decision making...reduce[s] job-related emotional strain, job dissatisfaction, absenteeism and turnover intentions鈥. They expected to find similar results in the context of graduate work.
After measuring the prevalence of mental health problems among the Flanders PhD students, the researchers examined the role of work and organisational context in aggravating these problems. Their multivariate analysis shows that work-family conflict was the most important predictor of psychological distress (at least two symptoms of poor mental health) and risk of a common psychiatric disorder (at least four symptoms). Other strong predictors related to job demands, job control and career prospects. Finally, they found that 鈥渁 closed [university] decision making culture鈥 has a 鈥渟ignificant impact on risk of psychiatric disorder鈥.
If, as we suggested above, all graduate students are vulnerable to mental health problems, the study shows that this shared vulnerability is in large part a function of their shared work and organisational context. A solution adequate to the scope of the problem, then, must go beyond small-scale cultural change. The Belgian researchers close their paper with the following recommendations: 鈥淥ur analyses suggest that universities will benefit in terms of PhD students鈥 mental health when they facilitate management of work-family balance and workload, [and] design open decision-making procedures.鈥
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Graduate students are increasingly vulnerable to present and future economic precarity, which bears directly on work-family conflict, job demands and job control. They must develop strategies for teaching, researching and writing more efficiently on shorter and shorter timelines in the hope that they will be rewarded with a slightly less precarious position. They feel guilty about not working hard enough or compare themselves to peers who seem to have it all figured out. The question of job control barely registers under these extreme conditions. One must have and keep a job before one can think about controlling it.
If universities are to 鈥渇acilitate management of work-family balance and workload鈥, they must address the issue of graduate student economic precarity. Where workers have less control over pay, insurance and decision-making procedures, they make , have lower-quality insurance and are increasingly subject to the of their bosses. The closed decision-making cultures of the typical research university allocate very little workplace control to graduate students. This deepens students鈥 vulnerability to economic (and psychological) precarity and enables further administrative growth at the expense of stable academic jobs. Graduate student mental health deteriorates as a direct result. In our view, then, the most efficacious means for ameliorating the graduate mental health crisis is to put more workplace control in the hands of graduate students. The tells us that the best way to do this is through unionisation.
As yet, labour unions have received little attention in connection to the graduate school mental health crisis. When they are mentioned in this context, they are usually with calling for improved campus mental health services or raising political consciousness about the crisis. But if we are correct that addressing economic precarity and administrative growth is most efficaciously done through unionisation, then graduate labour unions are far more than just committed advocates for students鈥 well-being. Indeed, we expect that having graduate labour unions in all US research universities would have a clinically significant positive impact on graduate student mental health over time.
Labour unions do at least three things that the small-scale 鈥渃ultural change鈥 approach described above cannot:
First, they give graduate students a formal mechanism for asserting greater job control and binding university administrations to employment contracts that secure longer-term economic stability. Most graduate students in the United States do not directly negotiate the terms of their pay, medical insurance plans, professional advisory relationships or work hours. As a result, they often live in economic , pay significant for mental health care and other services, are or at work, and have no way of addressing systemic problems. Labour unions can help tackle these problems as what they are: symptoms of low job control that have a negative impact on mental health.
Second, graduate labour unions increase non-competitive interpersonal contact between graduate students, fostering a community based on shared interests and a common purpose. With so many graduate students reporting that and a sense of purposelessness negatively impact their mental health, unions 鈥 organisations built on purposeful solidarity 鈥 introduce substantial cultural changes to the academic workplace.
Third, graduate labour unions streamline communication between graduate students and high-level administrators about workplace organisational issues. Without unions, graduate students rely upon the goodwill and political savvy of lower-level administrators to channel their workplace-related concerns to higher administrators. This process is inefficient and delivers inconsistent results. Placing everyone at the contract table together increases not only the transparency but also the efficiency of communication between the top and bottom levels of the university hierarchy. It multiplies opportunities for higher administrators to have substantive interface with graduate students and reduces the latter鈥檚 alienation from administrative authority, imbuing them with a greater sense of efficacy and standing in their workplace.
We are not claiming that labour unions alone would solve the mental health crisis in graduate schools. Yet it is clear that features of the academic workplace are causally linked to mental health problems. So we are saying that labour unions are a necessary, though not sufficient, means for improving the mental health of graduate students.
The lack of an overarching legal standard for graduate collective bargaining is one reason that unions have not been integral to the mental health discussion. Federal law permits US states to implement widely varying standards with regard to public university employees鈥 collective bargaining rights. Although graduate unions have existed at some public research universities for decades, their eligibility to bargain has been determined on a state-by-state basis since This has created a situation in which dozens of US states exclude public-university graduate students from collective bargaining, while others permit it. For private universities, meanwhile, federal labour law has gone back and forth since the 1970s in its interpretation of graduate students鈥 employment status. The NLRB has changed its position several times as to whether teaching courses, grading papers and working in laboratories legally constitutes work. The current precedent, set by the board鈥檚 2016 Columbia decision, is that such activities do constitute work, meaning that postgraduates at private universities currently have the right to bargain (the board鈥檚 new proposal would change this). Still, the legally unstable definition of graduate work has enabled many private universities to argue either (1) that their graduate students are not really workers or (2) that they are 鈥溾 and so defining them as workers would negatively impact on their education.
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Such arguments are easily refuted. The National Labor Relations Act construes work broadly as value-generating economic activity. Consider the tasks that graduate students perform daily at most private and public research universities: designing and teaching introductory-level undergraduate courses; grading and guest-lecturing for upper-level undergraduate courses; researching and editing faculty publications; producing original research for conferences and journals; working part- or full-time as laboratory assistants; and more. These tasks generate substantial economic value, and if graduate students did not perform them, life at US research universities would come to a screeching halt.
As for the 鈥減rimarily students鈥 argument, a recent shows that unionised graduate students enjoy the same or better relationships with their faculty advisers as their non-unionised counterparts.
But the problem here is not just that universities misstate the impact of work on graduate education. As Georgetown PhD student Hailey Huget suggests in a , the education/work distinction itself blurs under critical scrutiny: if work is just value-generating economic activity, and studying is an activity that enhances one鈥檚 capacity to generate economic value, then studying is already economic activity in a relevant sense and may warrant compensation.
Huget鈥檚 argument may seem radical, but it really isn鈥檛. Private-sector companies routinely pay new hires for job training and even subsidise employees to pursue continuing education. They recognise that job training and higher education enhance their workers鈥 value-generating capacity. In the case of graduate students, the link is even stronger: when they apprentice in labs or as instructors of record or fulfil professional development requirements, they are not only enhancing their capacity to generate future value but simultaneously generating immediate value for the university.
The flimsiness of the 鈥渘ot workers鈥 and 鈥減rimarily students鈥 arguments suggests that the fundamental reason that universities do not encourage unionisation has little to do with whether graduate students are proper bearers of collective bargaining rights. Instead, universities discourage unionisation because it comes with substantial costs.
The fact that there is so much momentum behind shifting workplace control towards university administrators has thus far prevented universities from addressing the fundamental causes of graduate students鈥 mental health woes. Many private research universities have actively discouraged or tried to graduate unionisation since the NLRB鈥檚 Columbia decision, offering arguments about its legal reasoning and insinuating (against ) that labour unions harm graduate education. Given the extant restrictions on graduate collective bargaining in many US states, not to mention the bitter battles going on at Columbia University, the University of Chicago and other private universities, it is unlikely that universities will yield voluntarily to graduate unionisation. A national movement for graduate unionisation led by graduate students is the only way to transform universities鈥 current financial and administrative priorities. It also induces universities to explain how they can promote graduate student well-being without supporting graduate unionisation.
Fortunately, the NLRB鈥檚 2016 Columbia decision has breathed new life into the graduate unionisation movement nationwide. Reframing unionisation as a mental-health issue enlivens this movement by providing graduate students with a powerful moral reason to organise.
A nationwide unionisation push must span many generations of graduate students and include legal, political and grassroots strategies to prevail. But it ought to and can prevail, especially if graduate students coordinate and cooperate across the public/private divide (the Coalition of Graduate Employee Unions is a ). For labour unions to have the maximum impact on graduate students鈥 mental health, they must exist in as many research universities as possible. This is because university administrations and academic workers must abide by systemic professional and economic standards in order to remain competitive. The policies and practices of one school reciprocally affect the policies and practices of others.
Universal does not have to mean uniform. There are many available approaches to graduate unionisation. Some graduate unions, such as Harvard鈥檚, have tried to go through the NLRB鈥檚 legal process, while others, such as Georgetown鈥檚, have opted not to and still managed to get to the bargaining table. Whatever the local strategy may be, one immediate task for graduate students everywhere is to apply a mental health framework to their unionisation drives. The authors鈥 experience as union organisers at Vanderbilt University may offer a model. For the past two years, as part of our drive to build campus-wide support for a recognition vote, our union has been framing graduate student mental health as a workplace organisation issue. Last year, we authored and lobbied with our Graduate Student Council for a that is now receiving national media . Making this concrete contribution to the improvement of mental health services on our campus has done more to increase our visibility and credibility than any other initiative we have undertaken.
The stakes are high. Universities cannot continue to evade the facts about this life-defining issue. If administrators wish to do something real to address the graduate school mental health crisis, they could start by getting out of the way of graduate unionisation. Since this is unlikely to happen, it is up to graduate students to take control of their own mental health. A future culture of academic flourishing will not replace the current culture of academic affliction unless graduate student solidarity prevails system-wide.
Sebastian Ramirez and Kelly Swope are PhD candidates in philosophy at Vanderbilt University and union organisers with .

The student perspective
Last quarter, 66 per cent of my teachers were graduate students. Yet the University of Chicago continues to deny that graduate students are lawful employees or workers. In a 2017 National Labor Relations Board hearing, its legal counsel dismissed such students as 鈥渘ot working, but teaching鈥.
This has now also become a national political issue. In September, the Trump administration proposed a new rule that would exclude graduate students from employee status, stripping them of bargaining rights that the Obama administration granted them in a 2016 decision.
UChicago students, graduates and undergraduates alike, have long fought for their voices to be heard. In June 2019, the Graduate Student Union organised a strike in the hope of persuading the school to voluntarily聽recognise the union and negotiate with it about fairer wages, adequate healthcare and other employee rights.聽A rally was held with聽more than聽, including former and present state senators such as Daniel Biss and Robert Peters. Senator Bernie Sanders to Chicago area supporters to join the picket line and to UChicago鈥檚 president urging him to allow unionisation. A sign outside Cobb Lecture Hall read 鈥渢he University works because we do鈥.聽
Despite the large turnout, UChicago remained firm in its stance in a university-wide email sent out after the strike. The provost, Daniel Diermeier, 鈥済raduate students are students, first and foremost. They come to the university to study, to learn how to teach future generations of students鈥; unionisation could 鈥渦ndermine鈥 their ability to attend to the needs of students.
Asked about the role of graduate students in grading papers and exams, David Nirenberg, dean of the Social Sciences Division, 聽the extra work involved in making sure that the graduate student grades "in a way that is consistent and reflects what you鈥檙e trying to communicate"聽means that, in practice, 鈥渉aving someone [else] grading is not a relief to me鈥. But this is only a tiny part of what graduate students do. They perform all the functions of a teacher, including holding office hours, leading trips, and planning and preparing discussion sections. One might say that the graduate student system is the backbone of the university.
Another dean graduate students teach for their own benefit and that it was just a 鈥渂yproduct鈥 that 鈥渢he undergraduate class will potentially gain additional information鈥. Yet in reality it is not a potential byproduct but a given that undergraduate classes gain information from taking notes and asking questions. Last quarter, for example, a graduate student taught a section on global warming, and his dedication to helping us succeed was very evident. He made sure to recap the last class at the beginning of each session, to ask if we had any individual questions and to send us relevant articles afterwards. So when he told us that he was going to be joining the picket line, I knew that he was acting not only in his own interests, but also in those of all his undergraduate students.
All over the US, graduate labour unions have been struggling to make administrations listen. It is crucial that we continue the struggle to overturn Trump鈥檚 proposed new rule and to get graduate students recognised as teachers as well as students.聽
Maggie Lu is a second-year student at the University of聽Chicago.聽
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Strength in numbers
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