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The benefits of being understood: The role of ethnic identity confirmation in knowledge acquisition by expatriates
Authors:Shea X. Fan  Christina Cregan  Anne‐Wil Harzing  Tine Köhler
Affiliation:1. School of Management, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia;2. Nottingham University Business School China, Ningbo, China;3. Department of Management and Marketing, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia;4. Middlesex University, Business School, London, the UK
Abstract:In this article, we propose that the concept of ethnic identity confirmation (EIC), the level of agreement between how expatriates view the importance of their own ethnic identity and how local employees view the importance of expatriates' ethnic identity, can explain why expatriates who are ethnically similar to host‐country employees are sometimes less effective than expected when working overseas. Multinationals often choose ethnically similar expatriates for international assignments, assuming these expatriates can more effectively acquire knowledge from local employees. Thus, understanding the specific challenges that endanger the realization of this potential is crucial. Our survey, administered to a sample of 128 expatriate–local employee dyads working in China, reveals that both ethnically similar and ethnically different expatriates acquire more local knowledge when EIC is high. However, the association between ethnic (dis)similarity and knowledge acquisition is direct for ethnically different expatriates, whereas for ethnically similar expatriates it is indirect via their perception of local employees' trustworthiness. We discuss this study's important implications and provide recommendations for multinationals on how to provide tailored support to expatriates who face different identity challenges.
Keywords:diversity  international HRM  knowledge management  social identity theory  trust
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