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Managing expatriates and other 'traditional' internationally mobile
workers is a significant part of many academic programmes and the
focus of some specialist ones. But we cannot answer the big
questions about working internationally if we exclude from our
teaching people who do not fit into our usual conceptions and
assumptions about who it is that organisations employ. Written by
two of the most frequently published authors in the field, this is
the only textbook to specialise in all the widely-accepted types of
international work such as high-status expatriation, international
business travel, short-term project work, and international
commuting, while also covering the management of low-status
expatriates, qualified immigrants, economic and low-skilled
migrants, and refugees. Topics include cost effective global HRM,
value and return on investment, localisation, home- and host-based
compensation, talent management, human rights, safety and security,
and duty of care - all examined from the differing perspectives of
organisational practitioners and international workers and their
families. In nine clear chapters, this book covers everything that
a teacher or student of expatriation and global mobility needs to
know, with each chapter written specifically as a primer for
teaching sessions. Chapters are research-led and data driven,
outlining current research on the topic. Included for each chapter
are learning objectives, chapter summaries, key theories, detailed
reference lists, additional reading lists, high-quality diagrams
and tables, class activities, and reflective questions suitable for
exam preparation. Supplemented with consulting reports and surveys
that are highly applicable to (working) MBA students, this is the
ideal textbook for any contemporary course in expatriate management
or international HRM needing to take it to the next level.
'In the Research Handbook of Expatriates, Yvonne McNulty and Jan
Selmer have created a seminal work that should be on the bookshelf
of all social scientists who work in the field of expatriation.
More senior scholars will appreciate the ''deep dive'' each chapter
takes into the literature, each one acting as a reservoir they can
draw from to powerfully inform their future research efforts.
Doctoral students and newly minted PhDs will find this book to be
especially valuable - the final chapter of the book alone provides
inestimable career and ''how-to-publish'' guidance for them in the
field of expatriation. The coverage of the history, construct,
milieu, research methodologies, and issues is the best I have come
across in a single volume in over 30 years of working in the field.
In short, this is a monumental contribution to the study of
expatriates and global mobility.' - Mark E. Mendenhall, University
of Tennessee 'McNulty and Selmer's edited volume does a wonderful
job of consolidating and integrating everything we know about
expatriates and their different types. This long-overdue Handbook,
featuring chapters by top researchers, lays a trail for scholars to
further advance the study of expatriates.' - Joyce Osland, San Jose
State University 'McNulty and Selmer's edited book of readings on
virtually all aspects of expatriates deserves a prominent place in
the library of researchers and practitioners interested in this
subject. The Handbook provides a historical overview as well as the
latest trends in expatriate studies and concludes with useful
guidelines on how to conduct as well as improve the quality of
research in this field.' - Rosalie L. Tung, Simon Fraser
University, Canada Constituting a comprehensive and carefully
designed collection of contributions, the Research Handbook of
Expatriates provides a nuanced and up-to-date discussion of
expatriates. Theoretically broad and groundbreaking, it offers
important and contemporary insights into emerging areas of research
warranting future consideration. Drawing upon a range of
perspectives from the field?s most distinguished academics,
contributions review the history of the literature in relation to
expatriates, from the development of the expatriate construct
through to the current state of research on business expatriates.
Subsequent chapters progress into detailed examinations of the
various types of business expatriates including LGBT,
self-initiated expatriates, female assignees, inpatriates,
international business travellers and commuters, and millennials.
Other themes include expatriate performance, adjustment,
expatriates to and from developing countries, global talent
management, and expatriates? safety and security. The Research
Handbook also covers expatriates in diverse communities such as
education, military, missionary, sports and ?Aidland?, and provides
additional commentaries relating to methodological issues, research
with practitioners, case studies, biculturals and ATCKs, and global
families. The Research Handbook concludes with publishing advice
for PhD and early career researchers. Stimulating insightful new
areas of study, this collection is a must read for academics and
scholars in the field of expatriate research, international
management, global human resource management and business
administration. It also offers a wealth of guidance for executives
and recruiters along with expatriates and professionals who may
expatriate. Contributors: M. Andresen, C. Brewster, L. Care, J.-L.
Cerdin, L. Clarke, D.G. Collings, M. Collins, A. Corbin, M.
Crowley-Henry, M. Dickmann, H. Dolles, R. Donohue, C. Doss, B.
Egilsson, A. Fee, K.L. Fisher, K.J. Hanek, A. Haslberger, T.
Hippler, K. Hutchings, M. Isichei, J. Lauring, L. Makela, R.
McPhail, S. Michailova, M. Moeller, B. Oberholster
'In the Research Handbook of Expatriates, Yvonne McNulty and Jan
Selmer have created a seminal work that should be on the bookshelf
of all social scientists who work in the field of expatriation.
More senior scholars will appreciate the ''deep dive'' each chapter
takes into the literature, each one acting as a reservoir they can
draw from to powerfully inform their future research efforts.
Doctoral students and newly minted PhDs will find this book to be
especially valuable - the final chapter of the book alone provides
inestimable career and ''how-to-publish'' guidance for them in the
field of expatriation. The coverage of the history, construct,
milieu, research methodologies, and issues is the best I have come
across in a single volume in over 30 years of working in the field.
In short, this is a monumental contribution to the study of
expatriates and global mobility.' - Mark E. Mendenhall, University
of Tennessee 'McNulty and Selmer's edited volume does a wonderful
job of consolidating and integrating everything we know about
expatriates and their different types. This long-overdue Handbook,
featuring chapters by top researchers, lays a trail for scholars to
further advance the study of expatriates.' - Joyce Osland, San Jose
State University 'McNulty and Selmer's edited book of readings on
virtually all aspects of expatriates deserves a prominent place in
the library of researchers and practitioners interested in this
subject. The Handbook provides a historical overview as well as the
latest trends in expatriate studies and concludes with useful
guidelines on how to conduct as well as improve the quality of
research in this field.' - Rosalie L. Tung, Simon Fraser
University, Canada Constituting a comprehensive and carefully
designed collection of contributions, the Research Handbook of
Expatriates provides a nuanced and up-to-date discussion of
expatriates. Theoretically broad and groundbreaking, it offers
important and contemporary insights into emerging areas of research
warranting future consideration. Drawing upon a range of
perspectives from the field?s most distinguished academics,
contributions review the history of the literature in relation to
expatriates, from the development of the expatriate construct
through to the current state of research on business expatriates.
Subsequent chapters progress into detailed examinations of the
various types of business expatriates including LGBT,
self-initiated expatriates, female assignees, inpatriates,
international business travellers and commuters, and millennials.
Other themes include expatriate performance, adjustment,
expatriates to and from developing countries, global talent
management, and expatriates? safety and security. The Research
Handbook also covers expatriates in diverse communities such as
education, military, missionary, sports and ?Aidland?, and provides
additional commentaries relating to methodological issues, research
with practitioners, case studies, biculturals and ATCKs, and global
families. The Research Handbook concludes with publishing advice
for PhD and early career researchers. Stimulating insightful new
areas of study, this collection is a must read for academics and
scholars in the field of expatriate research, international
management, global human resource management and business
administration. It also offers a wealth of guidance for executives
and recruiters along with expatriates and professionals who may
expatriate. Contributors: M. Andresen, C. Brewster, L. Care, J.-L.
Cerdin, L. Clarke, D.G. Collings, M. Collins, A. Corbin, M.
Crowley-Henry, M. Dickmann, H. Dolles, R. Donohue, C. Doss, B.
Egilsson, A. Fee, K.L. Fisher, K.J. Hanek, A. Haslberger, T.
Hippler, K. Hutchings, M. Isichei, J. Lauring, L. Makela, R.
McPhail, S. Michailova, M. Moeller, B. Oberholster
Managing expatriates and other 'traditional' internationally mobile
workers is a significant part of many academic programmes and the
focus of some specialist ones. But we cannot answer the big
questions about working internationally if we exclude from our
teaching people who do not fit into our usual conceptions and
assumptions about who it is that organisations employ. Written by
two of the most frequently published authors in the field, this is
the only textbook to specialise in all the widely-accepted types of
international work such as high-status expatriation, international
business travel, short-term project work, and international
commuting, while also covering the management of low-status
expatriates, qualified immigrants, economic and low-skilled
migrants, and refugees. Topics include cost effective global HRM,
value and return on investment, localisation, home- and host-based
compensation, talent management, human rights, safety and security,
and duty of care - all examined from the differing perspectives of
organisational practitioners and international workers and their
families. In nine clear chapters, this book covers everything that
a teacher or student of expatriation and global mobility needs to
know, with each chapter written specifically as a primer for
teaching sessions. Chapters are research-led and data driven,
outlining current research on the topic. Included for each chapter
are learning objectives, chapter summaries, key theories, detailed
reference lists, additional reading lists, high-quality diagrams
and tables, class activities, and reflective questions suitable for
exam preparation. Supplemented with consulting reports and surveys
that are highly applicable to (working) MBA students, this is the
ideal textbook for any contemporary course in expatriate management
or international HRM needing to take it to the next level.
Expatriation is a big topic, and getting bigger. Over 200 million
people worldwide now live and work in a country other than their
country of origin. Tens of billions of dollars are spent annually
by organizations that move expatriates around the world. Yet,
despite the substantial costs involved, expatriation frequently
results in an unsatisfactory return on investment (ROI), with
little or no knowledge as to how to improve it. Why is this so? The
problem overwhelmingly lies in the poor delivery of effective
expatriate management which is frequently handicapped by a lack of
understanding of international careers and the forces that drive
competition in the 'global war for talent', an increasingly
short-term profit-driven focus, and a failure to adopt the rational
strategic approach that organizations automatically apply to other
areas of their business. Drawing on more than a decade of
expertise, research, and publications in top journals, we contend
that the key to getting a satisfactory ROI from expatriates is in
understanding expatriates themselves, about whose experiences we
have extensive information. We provide a practical 'insider's'
guide which reveals why expatriates seek and accept international
assignments, how they feel impacted by new forms of remuneration
and other working conditions, how international assignments fit in
with their longer-term career aspirations, and what complications
arise in terms of their families. These are considered in a context
that includes the understanding of the drivers for mobility in
organizations, emerging trends in global staffing, the global war
for talent, and alternative strategies to expatriation. We outline
for managers and consultants what modern-day global mobility is
like (based on our decade-long study with nearly four hundred
expatriates and their managers, over a hundred of whom we
interviewed personally), how it is changing, and why now, more than
ever, a hard-nosed ROI approach is necessary. By drawing on our
extensive experience and research, observations of key trends, and
'crystal ball' predictions, we define new practices for managing
global mobility and consider forecasted trends in expatriation over
the next decade.
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