“This is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migration

Abstract In recent years, an increasingly international competition for highly-skilled professionals has become apparent. Many countries try to attract highly-skilled migrants and to keep them for the long term. These countries also allow the immigration of close family members, who are expected to...

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Main Author: Stefanie Föbker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-02-01
Series:Comparative Migration Studies
Subjects:
UK
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-018-0104-4
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spelling doaj-41d712a015434a889dce8d414aae40932020-11-25T02:26:13ZengSpringerOpenComparative Migration Studies2214-594X2019-02-017111810.1186/s40878-018-0104-4“This is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migrationStefanie Föbker0Department of Geography, University of BonnAbstract In recent years, an increasingly international competition for highly-skilled professionals has become apparent. Many countries try to attract highly-skilled migrants and to keep them for the long term. These countries also allow the immigration of close family members, who are expected to play an important role in the decision to migrate and to stay in a country. However, accompanying partners often face significant difficulties when entering the foreign labour market. The paper is based on 26 qualitative interviews with the accompanying partners of highly-skilled migrants in the United Kingdom [UK]. It explores the challenges that they face when trying to take up work after migration, elaborates on their strategies of finding work and examines the conditions for their labour market integration. The paper draws on Bourdieu’s concept of capital accumulation and conversion and asks how partners negotiate the value of their cultural capital after migration. In order to better understand their professional integration, accompanying partners’ positions after migration are related to their career plans before migration. Consequently, the paper differentiates between family migrants who use their expatriation as an occasion for a career change, family migrants who continue their career abroad and family migrants who wish to continue their career, but do not succeed.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-018-0104-4Family migrationLabour marketHighly-skilled migrantsQualitative researchUK
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefanie Föbker
spellingShingle Stefanie Föbker
“This is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migration
Comparative Migration Studies
Family migration
Labour market
Highly-skilled migrants
Qualitative research
UK
author_facet Stefanie Föbker
author_sort Stefanie Föbker
title “This is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migration
title_short “This is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migration
title_full “This is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migration
title_fullStr “This is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migration
title_full_unstemmed “This is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migration
title_sort “this is not a career move” - accompanying partners’ labour market participation after migration
publisher SpringerOpen
series Comparative Migration Studies
issn 2214-594X
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract In recent years, an increasingly international competition for highly-skilled professionals has become apparent. Many countries try to attract highly-skilled migrants and to keep them for the long term. These countries also allow the immigration of close family members, who are expected to play an important role in the decision to migrate and to stay in a country. However, accompanying partners often face significant difficulties when entering the foreign labour market. The paper is based on 26 qualitative interviews with the accompanying partners of highly-skilled migrants in the United Kingdom [UK]. It explores the challenges that they face when trying to take up work after migration, elaborates on their strategies of finding work and examines the conditions for their labour market integration. The paper draws on Bourdieu’s concept of capital accumulation and conversion and asks how partners negotiate the value of their cultural capital after migration. In order to better understand their professional integration, accompanying partners’ positions after migration are related to their career plans before migration. Consequently, the paper differentiates between family migrants who use their expatriation as an occasion for a career change, family migrants who continue their career abroad and family migrants who wish to continue their career, but do not succeed.
topic Family migration
Labour market
Highly-skilled migrants
Qualitative research
UK
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-018-0104-4
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