Personnel affairs
You may at some point experience problems in your employment relationship with the university. You might feel as if your supervisor will never be satisfied with your performance, or you may not be comfortable with certain decisions. If you’re concerned, don’t hesitate to ask for advice.
Marije Bedaux
Confidential counsellor for personnel affairs
“A person might feel like they can never meet their supervisor’s expectations, as if more is always expected of them. Or something could go wrong with the balance of power. There’s always more than one side to the story, so you try to get to the heart of the problem.”
Bedaux works in the Faculty of Law’s Career Service as a career coach for students. She has taken a number of professional courses and is trained in mediation.
Contact Marije Bedaux by email.
Nadia Garnefski
Confidential counsellor for personnel affairs
“As a confidential counsellor, I listen to you and help you back on track by looking for possible solutions together; don't wait too long to get in touch; sometimes the first step is easier than you think..”
Garnefski is a healthcare psychologist (GZ-psycholoog) and a senior lecturer in the Clinical Psychology department of the Institute of Psychology. One of her research areas is the development of e-health programmes for adults and young people dealing with feelings of depression.
Contact Nadia Garnefski by email.
The confidential counsellor will help you look for a solution, so you can go back to feeling good at work. All your meetings with the confidential counsellor are confidential, and nothing will be done without your permission.
Don’t hesitate to ask for advice
Your first port of call to discuss your concerns is your supervisor or HR adviser. It may be that you are unable to resolve the issue with him/her, and your supervisor may even be part of the problem. In that case, you can talk to the confidential adviser for personnel affairs. The university employs two confidential counsellors focused on personnel affairs. They can help you with:
- Problems with your manager and/or colleagues, including communication problems.
- Changes to your work or in the organisation, possibly as a result of a reorganisation, which you consider to have improper or unwarranted consequences.
- Misunderstandings in your immediate working environment that you are not confident in addressing openly.
- Referring you to the right confidential counsellor if you need specific expertise.
More information about confidential counsellor
You can find more about what a confidential counsellors does and does not do, confidentiality and options for appeal and objection on the page Confidential counsellors.
Appeals and Objections Committee
If you disagree with a decision, and you cannot resolve the matter among yourselves, you can lodge an appeal against the decision with the Committee for Appeals and Objections. The committee, the secretary and the associated secretarial staff are all bound by a duty of confidentiality. All information will be handled in confidence.
More information
You can find more about what a confidential advisor does and does not do, confidentiality and options for appeal and objection on the page Confidential Counsellors.