Determinants of migrant career success: a study of recent skilled migrants in Australia

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Rajendran, Diana;Ng, Eddy S.;Ayub, Nailah
Abstract

Australia has been aggressively pursuing skilled migrants to sustain its population and foster economic growth. However, many skilled migrants experience a downward career move upon migration to Australia. Based on a survey of recent skilled migrants, this study investigates how individual (age, years of settlement, qualifications), national/societal (citizenship and settlement), and organization‐level (climate of inclusion) factors influence their career success. Overall, we found that: (1) age at migration matters more than length of settlement in predicting skilled migrant career success; (2) citizenship uptake and living in a neighbourhood with a greater number of families from the same country of origin facilitate post‐migration career success; and (3) perceptions of one's social/informal networks in the workplace – a dimension of perceived organizational climate of inclusion – also have a positive impact on migrant career outcomes.

Journal

International Migration

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Volume

58

ISBN/ISSN

1468-2435

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Issue

2

Pages Count

22

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Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

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Publisher Location

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Publish Date

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Url

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Date

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1111/imig.12586