52 research outputs found
Careers of highly educated self-initiated expatriates : observations from studies among Finnish business professionals
This chapter reviews existing literature about the careers of self-initiated expatriates and analyzes the different studies carried out among university level educated Finnish business professionals. A series of studies carried out among members of the Finnish Association of Business School Graduates during the last 15 years was cross-analyzed. The studies are based on three surveys and further interviews among their expatriate members (1999, 2004 and a follow-up study in 2012) also involving SIEs. Therefore, this chapter provide an overview of what we know about the careers of Finnish SIEs and show evidence of (1) their career motives, (2) the role of family considerations in the career decision making of SIEs, (3) the development of career capital and social capital during SIE-experiences, and also (4) longer-term career impacts of SIE-experiences. Based on the literature review and analysis of above mentioned studies we highlight the gaps in in the knowledge about SIEs and suggest areas where further research is needed.fi=vertaisarvioitu|en=peerReviewed
Linking institutional context to the community and career embeddedness of skilled migrants: The role of destination- and origin-country identifications
Supplementary Information is available online at: https://link-springer-com.ezproxytest.brunel.ac.uk/article/10.1057/s41267-024-00683-w#Sec140 .Migration is one of the most pressing global issues of our time. However, relatively little is known about the factors and mechanisms that govern the post-migration experiences of skilled migrants. We adopt an acculturation- and social identity-based approach to examine how differences between institutional characteristics in the destination and origin country, as well as migrantsâ experiences with formal and informal institutions shape their identification with the destination and origin country and contribute to their community and career embeddedness. Our study of 1709 highly skilled migrants from 48 origin countries in 12 destination countries reveals that the institutional environment migrants encounter provides both sources of opportunity (potential for human development and value-congruent societal practices) and sources of disadvantage (experienced ethnocentrism and downgrading). These contrasting dynamics affect migrantsâ destination-country identification, their origin-country identification and, ultimately, their embeddedness in the destination country. Our results have important implications for multinational enterprises and policy makers that can contribute to enhancing skilled migrantsâ community and career embeddedness. For example, these actors may nurture a work environment and provide supportive policies that buffer against the institutional sources of disadvantage we identified in this study, while helping migrants to leverage the opportunities available in the destination country.Open access funding provided by Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU).. Sebastian Reiche gratefully acknowledges the support from the Ministerio de Ciencia e InnovaciĂłn, grant ECO2015-68272-P funded by MCIN/AEI/https://doi-org.ezproxytest.brunel.ac.uk/10.13039/501100011033, and by âERDF A way of making Europeâ, by the European Union. Mila Lazarova acknowledges the support of the Canada Research Chairs Program. Lena Zander would like to gratefully acknowledge Jan Wallanders och Tom Hedelius stiftelse and Tore Browaldhs stiftelse, Sweden, for financially supporting her research project (P17-0117) and the workshop organized at Sigtuna Folkhögskola for the research team in June, 2022. Eric Davoine gratefully acknowledges the NCCR LIVES for their financial support
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The career competencies of self-initiated and assigned expatriates: assessing the development of career capital over time
Building on a modern careers approach, we assess the effects of working abroad on individualsâ career capital. Given the dearth of longitudinal studies, we return to a sample of economics graduates in Finland eight years later. We measure changes in three dimensions of career capital; âknowing howâ, âknowing whomâ, âknowing whyâ and find that company assigned expatriates learn more than self-initiated expatriates. All three career capital areas benefit from international experience and all are increasingly valued over time. Based on our findings we conclude that a dynamic notion of career capital acquisition and use is needed. Managerial implications include the need for a wider view of talent management for international businesses
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Contrasting assigned expatriates and self-initiated expatriates: a review of extant research and a future research agenda
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Hidden inequalities amongst the international workforce
This chapter focuses on low status expatriates who have been largely âhiddenâ from managerial scholarship. They are âhiddenâ because they are ignored by the migrant literature which looks at people trying to remain in their new society and gain citizenship; and ignored by the expatriation literature which is mainly concerned with high-status âtopâ talent. These hidden expatriates are typically maids, drivers, security guards, and construction workers - low status and low paid, unable to obtain citizenship, and liable to be sent home, unemployed, at the whim of their employer. If we, as scholars, are to contribute to the betterment of society by elevating the health and well-being of those who live in it, then we must recognise the existence of and address the management issues and concerns of those at the âbottom of the pyramidâ. We use Organisational Justice theory and draw on examples from Turkey, Singapore and the Middle East to examine the position, the concerns, and the issues of such workers and their often-unequal place in the workforce
Cross-Border Mobility of Self-Initiated and Organizational Expatriates
Globalization in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries has been marked by an increase in cross-border mobility of the highly skilled. Though self-initiated expatriation is a widespread phenomenon, it has received relatively little attention in the academic literature. Furthermore, large-scale studies that track self-initiated and organizational expatriates together, over time and across geographies, are noticeably absent from the literature. Consequently, our understanding of these two forms of mobility is relatively limited. This study, which is the first large-scale analysis of the trends in and patterns of the mobility of organization-initiated expatriates and self-initiated expatriates, attempts to fill this gap by analyzing the mobility patterns of 55,915 highly skilled individuals who made 76,660 cross-border moves between 1990 and 2006. Specifically, we analyze patterns of geographic mobility and then examine the rate, duration, and direction of self-initiated and organizational expatriation over time. Finally, we consider demographic differences in mobility between the two groups
Boundaryless career drivers - exploring macro-contextual factors in location decisions
This paper explores what attracts individuals to live in a South East Asian city. It uses a boundaryless career approach that is interested in how people cross traditional career boundaries, including those related to country and location barriers. Going beyond an individual and organizational view, a more extensive model of location decisions is developed that incorporates broad macro-factor career drivers.
"Boundaryless career drivers - exploring macro-contextual factors in location decisions" published in Journal of Global Mobility: The Home of Expatriate Management Research has been selected by the journal's editorial team as the Outstanding Paper of 2014
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Talent management and expatriation: bridging two streams of research and practice
This paper argues that talent management and expatriation are two significantly overlapping but separate areas of research and that bringing the two together has significant and useful implications for both research and practice. We offer indications of how this bringing together might work, in particular developing the different results that will come from narrower and broader concepts of talent management. Our framework defines global talent management as a combination of high-potential development and global careers development. The goal of the paper is to lay the foundations for future research while encouraging organizations to manage expatriation strategically in a talent-management perspective
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