This thesis examines the working lives of foreign-born academics who come to work to the UK. Its main aim is to understand the degree and conditions of migrant scholars’ inclusion in professional practice abroad. The thesis fulfils this aim by developing a conceptual approach to encapsulate how migrant professionals’ working lives are conditioned by the pre-existing professional structures. Grounded in the principle of social closure, this framework proposes that migrant professionals’ employment abroad is influenced by the different forms and rules of closure, as well as by the sites in which closure rules are applied. The synthesis of the theoretical framework with findings from sixty-two interviews with foreign-born scholars empl...
Because mobility has been described as a key element of the academic habitus and a well‐established ...
This article reports on a study that examined the personal employment paths of six international aca...
This article reports on a study that examined the personal employment paths of six international aca...
This article examines the internationalisation of professions in a qualitative study of migrant acad...
This work was supported by the 600th Anniversary PhD Scholarship provided by the School of Managemen...
This article examines the internationalisation of professions in a qualitative study of migrant acad...
Current understanding of international academic mobility tends to view migrant academics as career-o...
Current understanding of international academic mobility tends to view migrant academics as career-o...
Internationalisation is a dominant policy discourse in the field of higher education today, driven b...
The Changing Academic Profession (CAP) international survey was designed in part to consider the eff...
Academics move from one country to another for myriad professional reasons, including the pursuit of...
This research investigates how migrant academics in Britain maintain their family and kinship relati...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
Because mobility has been described as a key element of the academic habitus and a well‐established ...
This article reports on a study that examined the personal employment paths of six international aca...
This article reports on a study that examined the personal employment paths of six international aca...
This article examines the internationalisation of professions in a qualitative study of migrant acad...
This work was supported by the 600th Anniversary PhD Scholarship provided by the School of Managemen...
This article examines the internationalisation of professions in a qualitative study of migrant acad...
Current understanding of international academic mobility tends to view migrant academics as career-o...
Current understanding of international academic mobility tends to view migrant academics as career-o...
Internationalisation is a dominant policy discourse in the field of higher education today, driven b...
The Changing Academic Profession (CAP) international survey was designed in part to consider the eff...
Academics move from one country to another for myriad professional reasons, including the pursuit of...
This research investigates how migrant academics in Britain maintain their family and kinship relati...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
Because mobility has been described as a key element of the academic habitus and a well‐established ...
This article reports on a study that examined the personal employment paths of six international aca...
This article reports on a study that examined the personal employment paths of six international aca...