Login

Login
Welcome:
Guest

Search for:


Browse:

Bannner: Aslib individual membership.
 
Journal search
Journal cover: Journal of Managerial Psychology

Journal of Managerial Psychology

ISSN: 0268-3946

Online from: 1986

Subject Area: Human Resource Management

Content: Latest Issue | icon: RSS Latest Issue RSS | Previous Issues

Options: To add Favourites and Table of Contents Alerts please take a Emerald profile

Previous article.Icon: Print.Table of Contents.Next article.Icon: .

Barriers and paths to success: Latin American MBAs' views of employment in Canada


Document Information:
Title:Barriers and paths to success: Latin American MBAs' views of employment in Canada
Author(s):Luciana Turchick Hakak, (Schulich School of Business, York University, Toronto, Canada), Ingo Holzinger, (Schulich School of Business, York University, Toronto, Canada), Jelena Zikic, (Atkinson School of Administrative Studies, York University, Toronto, Canada)
Citation:Luciana Turchick Hakak, Ingo Holzinger, Jelena Zikic, (2010) "Barriers and paths to success: Latin American MBAs' views of employment in Canada", Journal of Managerial Psychology, Vol. 25 Iss: 2, pp.159 - 176
Keywords:Canada, Central America, Discrimination, Employment, Immigrants, Master of business administration
Article type:Research paper
DOI:10.1108/02683941011019366 (Permanent URL)
Publisher:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Acknowledgements:The authors sincerely thank Rekha Karambayya for her insightful contributions to this paper.
Abstract:

Purpose – This paper aims to examine perceived barriers and paths to success for Latin American immigrant professionals in the Canadian job market.

Design/methodology/approach – Findings are based on 20 semi-structured interviews with Latin American graduates of Canadian MBA programs. Interviews were analyzed for emergent categories and common themes.

Findings – Despite their strong educational backgrounds, participants perceived several challenges to their success in the Canadian workplace, specifically, language barriers, lack of networks, cultural differences and discrimination. They also identified factors that influenced their professional success in Canada, such as homophilious networks and their Latin American background.

Research limitations/implications – By investigating stories of Latin American immigrant professionals, the study explores subjective views of immigration experiences and discrimination in this unique and rarely examined group. A larger sample will increase the confidence of the study's findings and future studies should examine dynamics of these issues over time.

Originality/value – This paper presents insight onto the labor market experiences and coping mechanisms of the currently understudied group of Latin American immigrant professionals in Canada. The study's qualitative approach enabled the examination of challenges experienced by immigrant professionals beyond those typically studied in this literature (e.g. devaluation of foreign credentials) and led to the finding that being Latin American can act both as a disadvantage in the form of discrimination and as an advantage as it differentiates immigrant professionals from other job seekers.



Fulltext Options:

Login

Login

Existing customers: login
to access this document

Login


- Forgot password?

- Athens/Institutional login

Purchase

Purchase

Downloadable; Printable; Owned
HTML, PDF (111kb)Purchase

To purchase this item please login or register.

Login


- Forgot password?

Recommend to your librarian

Complete and print this form to request this document from your librarian


Marked list

Bookmark & share

Reprints & permissions

© Emerald Group Publishing Limited  |  Copyright information  |  Site policies  |  Cookie information
.