Transnational Migration and the New Subjects of Work: Transmigrants, Hybrids and Cosmopolitans

Hardback

Main Details

Title Transnational Migration and the New Subjects of Work: Transmigrants, Hybrids and Cosmopolitans
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Banu OEzkazanc-Pan
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:174
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156
Category/GenreOrganizational theory and behaviour
ISBN/Barcode 9781529204544
ClassificationsDewey:304.8
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations No

Publishing Details

Publisher Bristol University Press
Imprint Bristol University Press
Publication Date 26 September 2019
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

In an increasingly globalised world, mobility is a new defining feature of our lives, livelihoods and work experiences. This book is a first in utilising transnational migration studies as a new theoretical framework in management and organisation studies. OEzkazanc-Pan presents a much-needed new concept for understanding people, work and organisations in a world on the move, while focusing on growing inequality associated with work in changing societies.

Author Biography

Joint Editor-in-Chief of the journal Gender, Work and Organization, Banu OEzkazanc-Pan is Associate Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship at the University of Massachusetts and visiting Associate Professor at Brown University.

Reviews

''This comprehensive and engaging book provides a valuable way in which organization studies can engage with transnational migration studies. Ozkazanc-Pan initiates a valuable theoretical conversation.'' Raza Mir, William Paterson University "What happens when we acknowledge mobility as the natural order of the social world? How does our thinking about people, about diversity, and inequality in the workplace need to change? Drawing on Transnational Migration Studies, the author extends an ontology of mobility for understanding possible selves under conditions of dynamic global change. Moving beyond fixed notions of identity and culture, and bringing in power and history, she demonstrates the profound ethical and epistemological implications, as well as needed change, in the ways in which difference has been theorized, researched, valued, and reproduced in the diversity and cross-cultural management fields. Both critical and hopeful, her transnational perspective is a much-needed intervention aiming to toward a fundamental transformation in the conversation about multiculturalism and inequality in organizations." Marta B. Calas and Linda Smircich, University of Massachusetts