Strangers in paradise? The wellbeing of migrant professionals across professional and personal environments
Fecha
2025-04-24Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
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. Highly skilled migration is increasing both in absolute terms and as a relative share of
international migration. The increasing number of migrant professionals (MPs) raises
questions about the consequences of their migration - for themselves, for society and
for the employing companies. While the wellbeing of different occupational groups
is well researched, the wellbeing of migrant professionals remains understudied.
In particular, migration studies have not yet captured the implications of migrant
professionals’ wellbeing. We theorise an understanding of wellbeing that integrates
both professional (workplace) and personal (family and non-work socialisation)
dimensions. Following Allardt’s conceptualisation of wellbeing as ‘Having, Loving,
Being’, we answer the question of how and what affects migrants’ subjective
wellbeing in their professional and personal spaces. We show how the professionalpersonal interface is defined in the context of transnational labour mobility. To do
so, we draw on our unique sample of 42 two-stage interviews with 21 MPs recruited
from abroad to high-level positions in Danish companies. We identify four key factors
that affect migrants’ wellbeing at the intersection of their professional and personal
lives: 1) social alienation at work, 2) professional autonomy, 3) work-leisure balance,
and 4) perceptions of equality and meritocracy. Our work is the first to provide
a comprehensive understanding of the factors that shape migrant professionals’
wellbeing in the context of their personal and professional lives.
Strangers in paradise? The wellbeing of migrant professionals across professional and personal environments
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
2214-594XPalabras Clave
.Migrant professionals, Subjective wellbeing, Allardt, Highly skilled migrants