This paper contributes to developing intersectionality theory by deepening understanding of how patriarchy and racism interact with other structural factors to influence low-paid migrants’ progression attempts. Using a critical realist approach and analysing interviews of thirty-one female and male migrants employed in five large organisations in Scotland and England, we reveal how major structural factors influence their main forms of identity work and the resources that they draw on in both the workplace and home. The feminist approach undertaken by this study makes significant advances to organisational intersectional theory in three ways. Firstly, it highlights the importance of examining the interaction of the influence of patriarchy w...
While skilled migration has become one of the most acceptable ways of entering Western European coun...
Evidence shows persistent inequalities between women and men regarding working conditions, wage leve...
Natalia Rocha Lawton, Moira Calveley, and Cynthia Forson, "Untangling multiple inequalities: interse...
This article contributes to developing intersectionality theory by deepening understanding of how pa...
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd This article contributes to developing intersectionality theory by deep...
This paper raises questions - rather than providing answers - about the theorization of intersection...
Little consensus exists regarding conducting intersectional studies. We introduce ‘intersectional id...
Previous intersectional research on ethnic minority women has largely focused on inequalities and di...
Little consensus exists regarding conducting intersectional studies. We introduce 'intersectional id...
doi: 10.1177/0018726721989790Previous intersectional research on ethnic minority women has largely f...
Previous intersectional research on ethnic minority women has largely focused on inequalities and di...
A growing body of research examines the experiences of women and migrants in the workplace; however,...
Through acknowledging migration as an embodied and gendered phenomenon, I problematise contemporary ...
The line between hypervisibility and invisibility appears to be blurred for Black and Minority Ethni...
Recent commentary on the invisibility of women within migration studies has now established that gen...
While skilled migration has become one of the most acceptable ways of entering Western European coun...
Evidence shows persistent inequalities between women and men regarding working conditions, wage leve...
Natalia Rocha Lawton, Moira Calveley, and Cynthia Forson, "Untangling multiple inequalities: interse...
This article contributes to developing intersectionality theory by deepening understanding of how pa...
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd This article contributes to developing intersectionality theory by deep...
This paper raises questions - rather than providing answers - about the theorization of intersection...
Little consensus exists regarding conducting intersectional studies. We introduce ‘intersectional id...
Previous intersectional research on ethnic minority women has largely focused on inequalities and di...
Little consensus exists regarding conducting intersectional studies. We introduce 'intersectional id...
doi: 10.1177/0018726721989790Previous intersectional research on ethnic minority women has largely f...
Previous intersectional research on ethnic minority women has largely focused on inequalities and di...
A growing body of research examines the experiences of women and migrants in the workplace; however,...
Through acknowledging migration as an embodied and gendered phenomenon, I problematise contemporary ...
The line between hypervisibility and invisibility appears to be blurred for Black and Minority Ethni...
Recent commentary on the invisibility of women within migration studies has now established that gen...
While skilled migration has become one of the most acceptable ways of entering Western European coun...
Evidence shows persistent inequalities between women and men regarding working conditions, wage leve...
Natalia Rocha Lawton, Moira Calveley, and Cynthia Forson, "Untangling multiple inequalities: interse...