“…The literature around CAS reinforces views of precarity as something that is differentially experienced (e.g., Rose, 2020), dehumanizing (Mason & Megoran, 2021), and self‐perpetuating (Schofield, 2022). The uncertainty CAS experience centers around not only work contracts, but also roles, status within departments, how to find information, and career development, making professional (and personal) planning incredibly difficulty (Loveday, 2018; Willson & Julien, 2020). The complex and intersecting realities of many CAS suggest the need to engage approaches such as information marginalization (Gibson & Martin, 2019) and information precarity (Stewart‐Robertson, 2022) which highlight the systemic and institutional processes (e.g., Willson, 2018, 2019) inhibiting access to information and leading to marginalization.…”