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HRM Challenges for Immigrant Employees: Status-Laden Transitions Across Cultures and Workplace Social Environments

Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management

ISBN: 978-1-80117-431-2, eISBN: 978-1-80117-430-5

Publication date: 19 August 2021

Abstract

Immigrants are important contributors to workplaces, but HRM scholars have only recently begun to study them systematically. We document the prevalence and cross-national variation in populations of immigrant employees. Going beyond a treatment that considers them as another element of diversity, we propose how gradients of status at each level of country, organization, and work group admittance can result in unique outcomes for immigrants who are equally (dis)similar. We offer a taxonomy of immigrant pathways into their destination countries to explore the status hierarchies they are assigned by governments and reinforced by organizations. We provide insights into the ascribed status of immigrants and develop a typology of individual and organizational acculturation strategies based on the cultural tightness and looseness of the destination and origin cultures. We then describe how the reactions of members of an immigrant employee’s social environment are sensitive to ascribed status and cultural tightness-looseness. We do so in a three-stage process that begins with immigrant categorization, followed by conferral of (il)legitimacy, and finally brought together with perceptions of outcome interdependence. Finally, we offer ideas about HRM interventions to guide management scholars in their quest for understanding and improve the experiences of immigrants in the workplace.

Keywords

Citation

Harrison, D.A., Harrison, T.L. and Shaffer, M.A. (2021), "HRM Challenges for Immigrant Employees: Status-Laden Transitions Across Cultures and Workplace Social Environments", Buckley, M.R., Wheeler, A.R., Baur, J.E. and Halbesleben, J.R.B. (Ed.) Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management (Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management, Vol. 39), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 203-237. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0742-730120210000039007

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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