TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-Sustaining Ethnic Minority Women: Constructing Their Identities
AU - Pio, E.
AU - Essers, C.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Embraced by their ethnicity and gender many migrant women have negotiated their own spaces in the host country. Yet, much of the literature on migrant women focuses on those who are struggling to make ends meet with low levels of education and how this defines the construction of the Other. We contribute to the limited scholarship in management research on professional migrant women by illustrating how transnational processes play out in the lived experience of professional migrant Indian women in New Zealand, and how they invoke agency in decentring Otherness. This qualitative study foregrounds the navigation of asymmetrical power relations and the strategic deployment of ethnicity, education and caste affiliation, when confronted with processes of exclusion in the labour market. We argue for the need to highlight narratives of professional migrant women which reflect the agency and articulation of their voices, thus reworking notions of the Other in transnational space. © 2013 British Academy of Management.
AB - Embraced by their ethnicity and gender many migrant women have negotiated their own spaces in the host country. Yet, much of the literature on migrant women focuses on those who are struggling to make ends meet with low levels of education and how this defines the construction of the Other. We contribute to the limited scholarship in management research on professional migrant women by illustrating how transnational processes play out in the lived experience of professional migrant Indian women in New Zealand, and how they invoke agency in decentring Otherness. This qualitative study foregrounds the navigation of asymmetrical power relations and the strategic deployment of ethnicity, education and caste affiliation, when confronted with processes of exclusion in the labour market. We argue for the need to highlight narratives of professional migrant women which reflect the agency and articulation of their voices, thus reworking notions of the Other in transnational space. © 2013 British Academy of Management.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84897961523
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84897961523&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1467-8551.12003
DO - 10.1111/1467-8551.12003
M3 - Article
SN - 1045-3172
VL - 25
SP - 252
EP - 265
JO - British Journal of Management
JF - British Journal of Management
IS - 2
ER -