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OverviewThis book showcases a critical sensemaking (CSM) study of how professional immigrants from Hong Kong to Canada make sense of their workplace experiences, and what this can tell us about why a substantial number leave in their first year in Canada. An analysis of the interviews demonstrates that immigrants' identities are grounded by contextual sensemaking elements. Data show that informants have accepted unchallenged assumptions: (1) that the government is providing help for them to ""get in"" the workplace; and (2) that the ethnic service organizations are offering positive guidance to their workplace opportunities. At the organizational level, a master discourse emphasizing integration has mediated immigrants' struggles. Within these frustrations, many have internalized a hidden discourse of inadequate or deficient selves and adopted a sacrificial position to maintain a positive sense of identity. The study concludes that a critical sensemaking approach allows greater insights into immigration processes than realist surveys, which tend to impose a pre-packaged sense of the immigrant experience. Through critical sensemaking, readers are encouraged to rethink the current role of ethnic service organizations in the immigration system. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Rosalie K.S. Hilde (Thompson Rivers University, Canada)Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited Imprint: Emerald Publishing Limited Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.382kg ISBN: 9781787436633ISBN 10: 1787436632 Pages: 184 Publication Date: 21 November 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsChapter 1: Introduction and Outline 1.1 An Overview of Contemporary Immigrant Issues 1.2 Introduction to the Study 1.3 The Contribution of This Study 1.4 An Insider’s Voice 1.5 Some Definitions 1.6 Outline of the Chapters Chapter 2: Deconstructing Immigrant Identity Work 2.1 Overview of This Chapter 2.2 Theme One: Structural Approaches to Visible Minority Immigrants 2.3 Theme Two: Identity Construction through Social Constructionism 2.4 Theme Three: Poststructuralist Literature on Identity Work Chapter 3: Methodological Approach 3.1 Overview of This Chapter 3.2 The Poststructuralist Perspective 3.3 Critical Sensemaking as a Conceptual Framework Chapter 4: Research Design 4.1 My Access and the Informants 4.2 Translation and Transcription 4.3 Other Texts 4.4 Ethical Considerations and Reflexivity 4.5 Data Analysis Chapter 5: Capturing the Discursive Elements of the Formative Context Retrospectively 5.1 Formative Context 5.2 The History of Chinese Immigrants in Canada and Canadian Immigration Policy 5.3 Immigrant Interview Accounts 5.4 The Political Sense of the Chinese Administration 5.5 The Lifestyle Discourse 5.6 In the Shadow of Whiteness: The Colonial Influence 5.7 Hong Kong’s Workplace Culture and Work Identity Chapter 6: Searching for Plausible Cues and Institutional Rules: The Politics of Normality 6.1 The Institutional Field and the Notion of a Deficient Self 6.2 Organizational Rules and Funding Requirements 6.3 The Dominant Discourse of Integration 6.4 A Silent Discourse of Exploitation Chapter 7: Agency and Identity Labels: The Micro-Processes of Resistance 7.1 Identity Labels 7.2 The In-Between Self 7.3 The Cost of Immigration 7.4 Ignorance Is Strength: Inside the Boundaries of Acceptance Chapter 8: Unpacking Workplace Inequality 8.1 Making Critical Sense of Workplace Inequality 8.2 Critical Implications 8.3 Contributions Epilogue References Appendix A: Unstructured Interview Questions Appendix B: Summary of InformantsReviewsThis case study analyzes the workplace experiences of skilled worker immigrants from Hong Kong who came to Canada with the purpose of entering the workforce, and what this reveals about why a large number leave in their first year. It focuses on their reflections on the structures and processes they face and the sense they have made of their situations, looking at sensemaking processes in relation to workplace opportunities, the social context, and power relations and inequality in organizations. It draws on documents and interviews with Hong Kong Chinese immigrants to understand how these immigrants make sense of immigration in Canada and their assumptions about having a better quality of life and their ideas about racist and cultural shocks; where and how they search for cues and institutional rules about employment; and how they develop strategies of resistance and identity work. It shows that they have assumptions that the government is providing help for them to get in to the workplace and that ethnic service organizations offer positive guidance to their workplace opportunities, and considers the role of racism and resistance. -- Annotation (c)2017 * (protoview.com) * This case study analyzes the workplace experiences of skilled worker immigrants from Hong Kong who came to Canada with the purpose of entering the workforce, and what this reveals about why a large number leave in their first year. It focuses on their reflections on the structures and processes they face and the sense they have made of their situations, looking at sensemaking processes in relation to workplace opportunities, the social context, and power relations and inequality in organizations. It draws on documents and interviews with Hong Kong Chinese immigrants to understand how these immigrants make sense of immigration in Canada and their assumptions about having a better quality of life and their ideas about racist and cultural shocks; where and how they search for cues and institutional rules about employment; and how they develop strategies of resistance and identity work. It shows that they have assumptions that the government is providing help for them to get in to the workplace and that ethnic service organizations offer positive guidance to their workplace opportunities, and considers the role of racism and resistance.--Annotation (c)2017 (protoview.com) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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