Expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences

Although adjusting to a foreign culture is not easy, being immersed in another culture is an experience lived by a growing number of persons in the globalized world. For expatriate managers, successful adjustment is imperative and fundamental in establishing overall effectiveness during overseas ass...

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Main Author: Russell, Roger Chesley
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Curtin University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/396
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author Russell, Roger Chesley
author_facet Russell, Roger Chesley
author_sort Russell, Roger Chesley
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Although adjusting to a foreign culture is not easy, being immersed in another culture is an experience lived by a growing number of persons in the globalized world. For expatriate managers, successful adjustment is imperative and fundamental in establishing overall effectiveness during overseas assignments. It is intriguing that organizations often blame the individual when expatriate assignments fail (Deresky 2002; Hodgetts and Luthans 2000; Swaak 1995a; Tung 1987) rather than recognizing that others may lack understanding of what it is like to be immersed in another culture. A study of Canadian expatriate managers who have worked in non-government organizations (NGOs) in Indonesia is presented. The research focuses on interpreting the lived experience of expatriate managers using their own words and meanings. Written descriptions from research participants were obtained via email and analysed/synthesized using Giorgi's descriptive phenomenological method (Giorgi 1975; 1985; Giorgi & Giorgi 2003). The central finding of the study is that expatriates experience paradoxical ways of being including feelings of: understanding/not understanding, discomfort/comfort, powerfulness/powerlessness, belonging/not belonging, being open to the new culture/yet holding on to own culture, freedom/restriction, being supported/not supported, and being unchanged/changed when immersed, living and working in another culture. The new knowledge and understanding obtained from this research may result in alterations to present human resource management practices and strategies utilized in facilitating and supporting expatriate assignments. These changes will enhance the experience for expatriate managers and organizations alike.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-3962017-02-20T06:41:50Z Expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences Russell, Roger Chesley expatriate managers human resource management expatriation Although adjusting to a foreign culture is not easy, being immersed in another culture is an experience lived by a growing number of persons in the globalized world. For expatriate managers, successful adjustment is imperative and fundamental in establishing overall effectiveness during overseas assignments. It is intriguing that organizations often blame the individual when expatriate assignments fail (Deresky 2002; Hodgetts and Luthans 2000; Swaak 1995a; Tung 1987) rather than recognizing that others may lack understanding of what it is like to be immersed in another culture. A study of Canadian expatriate managers who have worked in non-government organizations (NGOs) in Indonesia is presented. The research focuses on interpreting the lived experience of expatriate managers using their own words and meanings. Written descriptions from research participants were obtained via email and analysed/synthesized using Giorgi's descriptive phenomenological method (Giorgi 1975; 1985; Giorgi & Giorgi 2003). The central finding of the study is that expatriates experience paradoxical ways of being including feelings of: understanding/not understanding, discomfort/comfort, powerfulness/powerlessness, belonging/not belonging, being open to the new culture/yet holding on to own culture, freedom/restriction, being supported/not supported, and being unchanged/changed when immersed, living and working in another culture. The new knowledge and understanding obtained from this research may result in alterations to present human resource management practices and strategies utilized in facilitating and supporting expatriate assignments. These changes will enhance the experience for expatriate managers and organizations alike. 2006 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/396 en Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle expatriate managers
human resource management
expatriation
Russell, Roger Chesley
Expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences
title Expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences
title_full Expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences
title_fullStr Expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences
title_full_unstemmed Expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences
title_short Expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences
title_sort expatriate managers' immersion in another culture: a phenomological study of lived experiences
topic expatriate managers
human resource management
expatriation
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/396