Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T02:31:28.670Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Expatriates’ Embeddedness and Host Country Withdrawal Intention: A Social Exchange Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2022

Miikka J. Lehtonen
Affiliation:
Rikkyo University, Japan
Alexei Koveshnikov*
Affiliation:
Aalto University, Finland
Heidi Wechtler
Affiliation:
University of Newcastle, Australia
*
Corresponding author: Alexei Koveshnikov (alexei.koveshnikov@aalto.fi)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

In this study, we conceptualize the thus far little explored relationship between expatriate and host country as a form of social exchange governed by the norm of reciprocity. Drawing from social exchange theory and our analysis of 451 self-initiated expatriates (SIEs) living and working in the United Arab Emirates, we examine whether the degree of SIEs’ career and community embeddedness explains their host country withdrawal intention via enhanced perceived institutional trust and a more tolerant attitude toward workplace discrimination. Our results provide general support for our theoretical model and most of our hypotheses. In this way, our article makes three contributions. First, it suggests a novel way to conceptualize the relationship between SIEs and host country as a form of social exchange. Second, it differentiates between two dimensions of embeddedness and explicates how the two contribute to SIEs’ intentions to stay in the host country. Finally, the analysis theorizes and empirically tests two previously little explored mechanisms of enhanced institutional trust and a more tolerant attitude toward workplace discrimination through which SIEs’ host country embeddedness influences their host country withdrawal intentions.

在本研究中,我们论述为什么驻外人员和东道国之间存在一种以回报为原则的社会交换关系。我们基于社会交换理论,假设驻外人员在职场和社区的嵌入程度可以解释他们从东道国的撤离意向,因为嵌入程度越高,越可能增进他们对当地体制的信任以及对职场歧视的容忍。我们对451位自愿从国外来到阿拉伯联合酋长国居住和生活的人员进行了调查和分析,结果支持了以上假设。

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The International Association for Chinese Management Research

INTRODUCTION

The global pandemic of COVID-19 has highlighted the critical role of the host country in expatriation. Yet, extant expatriation research has largely focused on examining the relationship between expatriates and host organization, whereas the expatriates’ relationship with the host country has received much less attention. The host country lurks in the background as the context wherein expatriates adjust to their host organization and perform their work-related duties. Most of the research tends to examine the role of the host country via one of the dimensions of cross-cultural adjustment, that is, general cultural adjustment (Bhaskar-Shrinivas, Harrison, Shaffer, & Luk, Reference Bhaskar-Shrinivas, Harrison, Shaffer and Luk2005; Takeuchi, Yun, & Tesluk, Reference Takeuchi, Yun and Tesluk2002). In this way, the host country is often flattened to its cultural dimension and assigned a peripheral or a contextual role. A somewhat deeper engagement with the host country can be found in a few studies that consider expatriate–host country environment fit (Haslberger, Brewster, & Hippler, Reference Haslberger, Brewster and Hippler2013; Peltokorpi & Froese, Reference Peltokorpi and Froese2014). Still, most of these studies tend to equalize the environment with its cultural dimension and focus on assessing its possible fit for the expatriate. Another stream of literature assigns the role of a host country's agents for host country nationals (Kang & Shen, Reference Kang and Shen2018; Mahajan & Toh, Reference Mahajan and Toh2014). But this research tends to focus on interpersonal relations and socialization/categorization processes among expatriates and host country nationals. It does not take into consideration the multiple dimensions and characteristics of the host country and how expatriates relate to the broader host country's context.

Yet, we know that for many, especially the growing population of self-initiated expatriates (SIEs), our focal group in this study, defined as ‘expatriates who self-initiate their international relocation, with the intentions of regular employment and temporary stay, and with skills/professional qualifications’ (Cerdin & Selmer, Reference Cerdin and Selmer2014: 1293), one of the primary motivations for relocation is the opportunity to experience a particular host culture or location (Doherty, Reference Doherty2013; Richardson & McKenna, Reference Richardson and McKenna2002; Selmer & Lauring, Reference Selmer and Lauring2011) rather than an opportunity to work for a specific employer. At the same time, expatriation is a process during which the expatriate forms multiple social exchange relationships with different stakeholders (Faeth & Kittler, Reference Faeth and Kittler2020; Fee & Gray, Reference Fee and Gray2020; Malek, Budhwar, & Reiche, Reference Malek, Budhwar and Reiche2015). These relationships extend beyond the organizational setting and expatriates’ proximal supervisors, co-workers/host country nationals, and host organizations. One crucial actor with which expatriates, and especially SIEs who oftentimes relocate for a specific culture or location, form a social exchange relationship is the host country itself. Yet, we know very little about how this relationship operates – in terms of what are its antecedents and via what mechanisms – when we look at it from a broader perspective that takes into consideration that the host country encompasses a broader set of aspects including ways of doing things, institutions, social relations, career ecosystems, and sentiments toward foreigners instead of narrowing the host country down to just its culture.

Several researchers have pointed out the importance of incorporating other dimensions, for example, political, economic, and ways of thinking, in addition to culture-related ones, into models that explain the experiences of internationally mobile individuals (Forstenlechner, Reference Forstenlechner2010; Hippler, Haslberger, & Brewster, Reference Hippler, Haslberger, Brewster, McNulty and Selmer2017; Navas, García, Sánchez, Rojas, Pumares, & Fernández, Reference Navas, García, Sánchez, Rojas, Pumares and Fernández2005). For instance, Hippler et al. (Reference Hippler, Haslberger, Brewster, McNulty and Selmer2017: 99) argued for the need to examine expatriation as it unfolds ‘in larger social systems’ and Forstenlechner (Reference Forstenlechner2010: 178) advocated for the importance of examining how SIEs relate to both their host organizations and host countries because he found that SIEs, for instance, ‘perceive justice and support from their host country in a similar way to how employees perceive organizational justice, though the consequences may not follow negative perception as quickly as they do in the organizational context’.

Focusing on career and community embeddedness allows an evaluation of the relationship between SIEs and their host country and the extent to which the host country ‘delivers’ what SIEs are expecting (and what they came for). It is defined as the extent to which certain career and/or community-related factors would be hard for expatriates to let go (sacrifice) if in the circumstance of their relocation from the host country (Chen & Shaffer, Reference Chen and Shaffer2017). Up to now, expatriation research has focused mainly on the benefits of job embeddedness in the organizational setting. For instance, job embeddedness has been shown to facilitate knowledge sharing and retention in the foreign workplace (Hussain & Deery, Reference Hussain and Deery2018; Lo, Wong, Yam, & Whitfield, Reference Lo, Wong, Yam and Whitfield2012; Stoermer, Davies, & Froese, Reference Stoermer, Davies and Froese2021; Yunlu, Ren, Fodchuk, & Shaffer, Reference Yunlu, Ren, Fodchuk and Shaffer2018) as well as increase job performance and organizational citizenship behavior (Andresen, Reference Andresen2015). Yet, research also indicates that in addition to work-related outcomes, other broader, host country-related aspects of embeddedness such as a sense of belonging, career opportunities, professional contacts, social networks, and the quality of living can be crucial for determining SIEs’ host country withdrawal intentions (Meuer, Tröster, Angstmann, Backes-Gellner, & Pull, Reference Meuer, Tröster, Angstmann, Backes-Gellner and Pull2019). Based on this, more research to provide ‘a deeper understanding of the mechanisms through which job embeddedness influences early repatriation’ was called for (Meuer et al., Reference Meuer, Tröster, Angstmann, Backes-Gellner and Pull2019: 784).

To this end, it is known that living and working in a foreign country is often stressful for SIEs. Extant research has emphasized the challenging nature of expatriation where various factors impeding expatriates’ adjustment and overall well-being are often present (Davies, Stoermer, & Froese, Reference Davies, Stoermer and Froese2019). Moreover, many SIEs are not able to overcome these challenges and leave the host country (Andresen, Goldmann, & Volodina, Reference Andresen, Goldmann and Volodina2018). For instance, the host location might be difficult to adjust to due to not only significant cultural but also institutional (in terms of how the host country's institutions work) differences between the expatriate's host and home countries (Bader, Stoermer, Bader, & Schuster, Reference Bader, Stoermer, Bader and Schuster2018; Kraimer & Wayne, Reference Kraimer and Wayne2004). These differences might make it difficult for the expatriate to trust local institutions.

Moreover, expatriates often experience discomfort in their host locations and at their workplace in the host country because host country nationals might treat them with suspicion, stigmatize, and discriminate against them (Bader et al., Reference Bader, Stoermer, Bader and Schuster2018; Lu, Saka-Helmhout, & Piekkari, Reference Lu, Saka-Helmhout and Piekkari2019; Moeller & Harvey, Reference Moeller and Harvey2011). For instance, Hussain and Deery (Reference Hussain and Deery2018) found that work-related shocks such as being overlooked or not considered for promotion predict SIEs’ turnover intentions. Furthermore, Haak-Saheem, Festing, and Darwish (Reference Haak-Saheem, Festing and Darwish2017) showed that expatriates perceive their ethnic and racial identity as having the greatest impact on the response they get when interacting with host country nationals. It follows that in addition to challenges related to cultural differences, SIEs often experience discomfort in the host country due to their lack of understanding and trust toward local institutions and due to discrimination and prejudice toward them from host country nationals.

Given the above, we propose to conceptualize the relationship between SIE and host country as a form of social exchange, and for this purpose, we draw from social exchange theory (SET; Blau, Reference Blau1964; Cropanzano & Mitchell, Reference Cropanzano and Mitchell2005; Emerson, Reference Emerson1976). SET posits that social behavior is the outcome of an exchange process governed by reciprocity. We argue that once the host country ‘delivers’ what SIEs expect from it in terms of providing conditions for SIEs to develop high degrees of career and community embeddedness, SIEs will reciprocate by increasing their commitment to stay in the host country and lowering their host country withdrawal intention, defined as ‘thoughts about and personal plans to quit or return prematurely from an international [relocation]’ (Shaffer & Harrison, Reference Shaffer and Harrison1998 in Bhaskar-Shrinivas et al., Reference Bhaskar-Shrinivas, Harrison, Shaffer and Luk2005: 261).

Moreover, we also explore the mechanisms through which SIEs reciprocate their host countries for the benefits that they provide them with. Research shows that SIEs relate to their host country context and its attributes through the prism of the extent of their expatriation's experiences (Mahajan & De Silva, Reference Mahajan and De Silva2012). For instance, Kim and Tung (Reference Kim and Tung2013) showed that expatriation-related negative experiences of Korean expatriates in India created challenges for their cross-cultural adjustment to India as a host country. We complement this literature by theorizing the mechanisms of perceived institutional trust, defined as an individual's expectation that some organized system will act with predictability and goodwill (Zucker, Reference Zucker1986), and workplace discrimination, defined as a situation in which an employee perceives that he/she is being treated in an unfriendly manner or receiving negative treatment on the basis of personal attributes that are not relevant to job performance (Sanchez & Brock, Reference Sanchez and Brock1996), that have remained largely unexplored in extant literature despite their acknowledged importance for expatriates, as per our discussion above. Thus, building on SET, we explain SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention as stemming from SIEs’ reciprocation of their career and community embeddedness to the host country in the form of enhanced perceived institutional trust and a more tolerant attitude toward workplace discrimination.

Empirically, we test our model by examining 451 SIEs in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which offers a suitable and highly relevant empirical context for our study for two main reasons. On the one hand, the UAE attracts a large number of expatriates and is often considered as one of the world's major expatriation hubs (Al-Waqfi & Forstenlechner, Reference Al-Waqfi and Forstenlechner2010). At the same time, numerous challenges for expatriates have been noted in both academic and practitioner-oriented literatures due to the UAE specifics in terms of its cultural characteristics as well as its policy of Emiratization, that is, an initiative by the UAE government to incentivize local companies to employ host country nationals in a meaningful and efficient manner in the public and private sectors (Al-Waqfi & Forstenlechner, Reference Al-Waqfi and Forstenlechner2014; Rees, Mamman, & Braik, Reference Rees, Mamman and Braik2007). The UAE context, thus, allows us to get insights into how SIEs’ career and community embeddedness influence their attitudes toward workplace discrimination and local institutions, ultimately decreasing their intention to leave the host country.

By doing so, we contribute to extant literature on SIEs and expatriates more generally in three ways. First, we propose a novel way to conceptualize and theorize the relationship between expatriate and host country as a form of social exchange governed by the norm of reciprocity. In this way, we advocate for assigning a more important (almost agentic) role to the host country that has thus far been largely reduced to its cultural dimension. Second, as opposed to the predominant focus on job embeddedness, we adopt a broader definition by incorporating both career and community dimensions and examined their individual effects on SIEs’ host country withdrawal intentions. We believe the two represent better the realities and aspirations of expatriates whose motivations to relocate are well acknowledged not to be limited to mere employment in one specific organization (Andresen, Biemann, & Pattie, Reference Andresen, Biemann and Pattie2015). Finally, we theorize two psychological mechanisms through which higher levels of expatriates’ embeddedness negatively influence their host country withdrawal intention. In this way, we offer novel insights into how embeddedness affects the perceptions of expatriates regarding a host country's institutions and workplace discrimination, making expatriates more complacent and tolerant, respectively. All in all, our study offers an illustration of how SET and reciprocity principle can be applied when theorizing the relationship between expatriate and host country.

THEORETICAL BACKGROUND AND HYPOTHESES DEVELOPMENT

Research Context

The UAE offers a fascinating and suitable empirical context in which to examine the relationships between SIEs’ embeddedness and host country withdrawal intentions via institutional trust and perceived workplace discrimination. As a relatively recently established nation (1971), the UAE is a federation of seven emirates that was formed as a consequence to the British deciding to withdraw their presence on the Gulf Coast as well as oil having been discovered in the UAE's territory during the 1960s. One of the initial reasons behind forming the federation was to create a counterforce to Iran's influence in the region, and as such national identity in the UAE – and on the Gulf Coast more broadly – is something that emerged more strongly after the country was formed (Al-Lamki, Reference Al-Lamki1998).

More specifically, during the early decades since oil was discovered, the UAE – like most other countries in the region – relied on a foreign workforce to set up the infrastructure in public and private sectors alike. At the moment, it is estimated that roughly 90% of the UAE population are expatriates (Dubai Statistics Center, 2020, cited in Haak-Saheem, Reference Haak-Saheem2020). During the last couple of years (including the COVID-19 pandemic years), the expatriate population has increased faster than the share of citizens, thus illustrating the attractiveness of the UAE among expatriates. According to a recent expatriate satisfaction survey (InterNations, 2021), the UAE was perceived as an attractive country for relocation mainly due to its safety, ease of settling in, transportation infrastructure, and good career opportunities. Indeed, given that the UAE continues to depend heavily on foreign workforce, making it smooth and effortless for expatriates to relocate is one of the key aspects in attracting foreign talent.

The reliance on foreign workforce, however, has created imbalances between citizens and expatriates. On the one hand, reliance on foreign workforce in the UAE has created concerns regarding the lack of local talent, and on the other hand, a diverse foreign workforce has also implied contradicting social and cultural values (Al-Dosary, Reference Al-Dosary2004). As a consequence, the UAE together with other countries of the Gulf Coast started to develop nationalization policies to ensure each country's economic resilience and social stability (to counter unemployment and political instability) (Rees et al., Reference Rees, Mamman and Braik2007).

The nationalization policy, known as Emiratization in the UAE, has exacerbated differences between citizens and expatriates not only in terms of their employment conditions but also their institutional standing. For example, as Haak-Saheem, Woodrow, and Brewster (Reference Haak-Saheem, Woodrow and Brewster2021) describe, the expatriates’ residence permit is tied to their employment (i.e., becoming unemployed means the expatriate has to leave the country) and simultaneously unionization and collective bargaining do not exist. In other words, each expatriate has to establish their connections and relationships on their own. Against this backdrop, Emiratization is often implemented by a foreign workforce (Elbanna, Reference Elbanna2021), thus possibly creating tensions between locals and expatriates. In other words, employing locals is perceived as an investment to the country's economic prosperity and stability, whereas utilizing a foreign workforce seems to be more of transactional nature (Waxin, Kumra, & Zhao, Reference Waxin, Kumra and Zhao2020).

In addition to the prevalent imbalance between the local and foreign workforce, the cultural adjustment is also not easy for many expatriates because the UAE – an Islamic state – represents a challenging cultural setting. More specifically, the UAE tends to be a strongly hierarchical society with significant inequalities in the distribution of power or opportunities, especially between host country nationals and expatriates (Alsarhan & Valax, Reference Alsarhan and Valax2020). Such unequal treatment or discrimination in the workplace, for instance in terms of hiring or promotion, can undermine expatriates’ trust towards local institutions and institutional practices. Moreover, since naturalization is almost impossible to achieve in the UAE (The Economist, 2021), the country is strongly shaped by its two-tier system where citizens and residents have different rights and responsibilities.

Furthermore, given that the UAE operates through the simultaneous presence of formal institutions and informal inter-organizational relationships (Sidani & Thornberry, Reference Sidani and Thornberry2013), for SIEs this duality can both further undermine their trust in institutions as well as increase withdrawal push. The reasoning here being that the process of building loyal and trustworthy relationships in such contexts can be time-consuming (Hutchings & Weir, Reference Hutchings and Weir2006) and due to their status as outsiders (Al-Esia & Skok, Reference Al-Esia and Skok2014), SIEs are likely to be excluded from informal networks. In turn, if the knowing-who dominates the knowing-how, SIEs may be predisposed to feel discriminated and thus distrust institutions more broadly.

Thus, we believe that the UAE offers a suitable empirical context to shed light on how SIEs reciprocate their career and community embeddedness, when it develops, to the host country by decreasing their host country withdrawal intentions via enhanced perceived institutional trust and a more tolerant attitude toward workplace discrimination. We now turn to developing our hypotheses.

Social Exchange Theory and Expatriation

As opposed to economic exchange, which mainly involves a short-term exchange of tangible resources, social exchange encompasses subjective, relationship-oriented interactions between parties (business organizations and stakeholders or employees and employers) characterized by an exchange of socio-emotional benefits, mutual trust and commitment, and a long-term focus (Blau, Reference Blau1964). SET posits that interactions between different parties create obligations and reciprocity and aims at explaining social behavior and attitudes in interaction (Cropanzano & Mitchell, Reference Cropanzano and Mitchell2005; Emerson, Reference Emerson1976). The theory has been used to explain a wide range of business-related and organizational phenomena such as organization–stakeholder relationships, relationship marketing, and the formation of business-to-business networks (Cropanzano & Mitchell, Reference Cropanzano and Mitchell2005; Lambe, Wittmann, & Spekman, Reference Lambe, Wittmann and Spekman2001). In the work setting, it has been applied to theorize engagement and organizational citizenship behavior as well as the psychological contracts of employees (Cropanzano & Rupp, Reference Cropanzano, Rupp, Gilliland, Steiner and Skarlicki2008; Saks, Reference Saks2006). Numerous studies showed that high-quality social exchange relationships motivate employees to reciprocate by perceiving higher organizational justice (Konovsky, Reference Konovsky2000), identifying more strongly with their employers (Riketta, Reference Riketta2005), and engaging in behaviors that have favorable consequences for employers such as, for instance, organizational commitment (Meyer, Reference Meyer, Cooper and Robertson1997).

However, whereas the positive consequences of high-quality social exchanges in employee–employer relationships are well documented, only relatively recently, research started to recognize that as a result of social exchanges employees form multiple relationships at work with multiple parties, such as the organization, co-workers, supervisor, and other managers (Cropanzano, Chrobot-Mason, Rupp, & Prehar, Reference Cropanzano, Chrobot-Mason, Rupp and Prehar2004; Wasti, Tan, & Erdil, Reference Wasti, Tan and Erdil2011). Subsequently, a multi-foci perspective on social exchange and its outcomes has been proposed (Herman, Huang, & Lam, Reference Herman, Huang and Lam2013; Lavelle, Rupp, & Brockner, Reference Lavelle, Rupp and Brockner2007; Stinglhamber, Caesens, Chalmagne, Demoulin, & Maurage, Reference Stinglhamber, Caesens, Chalmagne, Demoulin and Maurage2021). Moreover, the perspective argues that in social exchange relationships employees not only pay attention to the different benefits that they receive but also consider the agent of the situation that provides these benefits and makes them possible, that is, who creates the preconditions for these benefits to realize and to whom can these benefits be attributed (Cropanzano, Byrne, Bobocel, & Rupp, Reference Cropanzano, Byrne, Bobocel and Rupp2001).

At the same time, extant studies that used SET in the context of expatriates have thus far solely focused on corporate expatriates and on explaining expatriate–employer relationships (Chen, Reference Chen2010; Bader, Reference Bader2015; Hon & Lu, Reference Hon and Lu2010; Maley, Moeller, & Ting, Reference Maley, Moeller and Ting2020) and have not paid attention to other possible social exchanges that expatriates form during expatriation (for a critical discussion of this issue, see Takeuchi, Reference Takeuchi2010). Extant research has employed SET to examine corporate expatriates’ psychological contracts (Chen, Reference Chen2010; Perera, Chew, & Nielsen, Reference Perera, Chew and Nielsen2017), adjustment and performance (Lee, Veasna, & Wu, Reference Lee, Veasna and Wu2013; Wu & Ang, Reference Wu and Ang2011), affective commitment (Kawai & Strange, Reference Kawai and Strange2014; Liu & Ipe, Reference Liu and Ipe2010), career development (Holtbrügge & Ambrosius, Reference Holtbrügge and Ambrosius2015), and positive work attitudes (Bader, Reference Bader2015). Only a few authors used SET to study SIEs specifically. These rare studies theorized SIEs’ attitudes and experiences focusing on SIEs’ psychological contracts (Kraak, Altman, & Laguecir, Reference Kraak, Altman and Laguecir2018; Perera, Chew, & Nielsen, Reference Perera, Chew and Nielsen2018), knowledge sharing (Tang, Chang, & Cheng, Reference Tang, Chang and Cheng2017), adjustment (Jannesari & Sullivan, Reference Jannesari and Sullivan2019), and the role of organizational support in affecting SIEs’ intentions to stay in the host country (Cao, Hirschi, & Deller, Reference Cao, Hirschi and Deller2014).

Yet, research on SIEs indicates that work-related outcomes – be they financial incentives or organizational commitment – are not the only important factors for SIEs and career development, networks and improvements in lifestyle also positively contribute to their expatriation satisfaction (Doherty, Reference Doherty2013). Research suggests that SIEs especially evaluate their expatriation experiences using a broad spectrum of criteria that go far beyond mere work-related aspects. Prior literature on SIEs (Doherty, Dickmann, & Mills, Reference Doherty, Dickmann and Mills2011; Doherty, Reference Doherty2013; Jokinen, Brewster, & Suutari, Reference Jokinen, Brewster and Suutari2008) shows that in their relocation SIEs are driven by diverse motives including hedonistic, escapist, family-, culture-, and/or career-related ones. Seen in this light, SIEs evaluate career opportunities and living standards abroad against the options they have in their home country/current country of residence as well as other alternative host countries. Thus, SIEs’ intention to relocate to the host country is, to a large extent, based on initial impressions on how their future being in the host locations would be. Since SET assumes one of the parties involved to initiate the interaction, the host country permitting an SIE to relocate can be seen as the initial step in a series of interactions forming a social exchange between SIE and host country.

Then, as the expatriate relocates and starts to interact with the host country more closely the social exchange relationship develops either positively or negatively. Perceived degree of embeddedness has been shown to be an appropriate and important indicator of the expatriate's experiences during expatriation (Chen & Shaffer, Reference Chen and Shaffer2017; Meuer et al., Reference Meuer, Tröster, Angstmann, Backes-Gellner and Pull2019). As argued above, it offers a suitable proxy for the extent to which the host country ‘delivers’ value to the expatriate within the boundaries of the social exchange relationship between them. In what follows, we use SET to theorize how the benefits manifested by a high degree of career and community embeddedness, for which the host country provides conditions and makes possible, motivates SIEs to perceive its attributes to be more trustful (via institutional trust) and tolerable (via more tolerant perceptions of workplace discrimination), and consequently to form a longer-term relationship with the host country (in the form of a lower host country withdrawal intention).

SIEs’ Host Country Embeddedness and Withdrawal Intention

Whereas previous research has often focused on on-the-job or organizational embeddedness (Stoermer et al., Reference Stoermer, Davies and Froese2021) which ‘refers to how enmeshed a person is in the organization where he or she works’ (Crossley, Bennett, Jex, & Burnfield, Reference Crossley, Bennett, Jex and Burnfield2007), given our interest in the role of the host country in expatriates’ withdrawal intention, in this study, we build on Tharenou and Caulfield (Reference Tharenou and Caulfield2010) and examine the role of host country embeddedness. It differentiates between career and community embeddedness and, as already mentioned, is defined as the extent to which certain career and/or community-related factors would be hard for expatriates to relinquish (sacrifice) in the circumstance of them having to relocate from the host country. Thus, the concept of embeddedness sheds light on how SIEs’ relationships form a broader network that determines SIEs’ career prospects and lifestyle in the host country and subsequently influences SIEs’ desire to stay or repatriate. SIEs initiate a relationship with their employer and the host country once they apply for a job and relocate to the country, and over time this relationship develops incorporating a range of aspects related to SIEs’ career and social life.

Extant research on embeddedness among expatriates shows that career and community embeddedness play a significant role in explaining why SIEs remain or quit their jobs (Hussain & Deery, Reference Hussain and Deery2018; Meuer et al., Reference Meuer, Tröster, Angstmann, Backes-Gellner and Pull2019) which goes beyond the explanations accounted for by, for instance, job satisfaction and organizational commitment (Crossley et al., Reference Crossley, Bennett, Jex and Burnfield2007). Given the boundaryless orientations of many SIEs (Cerdin & Pargneux, Reference Cerdin and Pargneux2010; Doherty, Richardson, & Thorn, Reference Doherty, Richardson and Thorn2013), it is plausible to assume that when considering their career goals SIEs are not likely to focus on achieving these goals by being employed by one single organization. Instead, they are more likely to be interested in career opportunities offered by a specific host country. Yet not every SIE adjusts or becomes embedded to an equal extent, and we know that many SIEs experience challenges with adjustment and psychological comfort in the host country during their relocation (Hussain & Deery, Reference Hussain and Deery2018; Davies et al., Reference Davies, Stoermer and Froese2019). In terms of SET, it means that not every SIE feels to the same extent that the host country has ‘delivered’ value to him/her.

Many host countries, including the UAE, the focal country in this study, are popular destinations for SIEs for they offer a wide range of comparatively well-paid employment often with good and extensive career prospects (Pinnington, Alshamsi, Özbilgin, Tatli, & Vassilopoulou, Reference Pinnington, Alshamsi, Özbilgin, Tatli, Vassilopoulou, Vaiman, Sparrow, Schuler and Collings2018; Singh, Edward Pereira, Mellahi, & Collings, Reference Singh, Edward Pereira, Mellahi and Collings2021). Such career embeddedness, if realized, is likely to increase the attachment of expatriates to the host country and decrease their withdrawal intentions (see Andresen, Bergdolt, Margenfeld, & Dickmann, Reference Andresen, Bergdolt, Margenfeld and Dickmann2014). Similarly, community embeddedness is equally important as the UAE is known to offer a comparatively high standard of living to expatriates (Haak-Saheem, Reference Haak-Saheem2020) and attaining high degrees of such embeddedness is also likely to decrease the SIE's intention to leave the host country. To sum up, sacrifices or personal losses in terms of leaving comparatively well-paid jobs, interesting projects, extensive employment opportunities, career prospects, comfortable lifestyle, or valuable social ties is likely to make leaving the host country more difficult. In terms of SET, we expect SIEs to reciprocate the received benefits, when these are realized, by forming a longer-term commitment to the host country. Therefore, we hypothesize:

Hypothesis 1a: SIEs’ host country career embeddedness is negatively associated with SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention.

Hypothesis 1b: SIEs’ host country community embeddedness is negatively associated with SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention.

The Mediating Mechanism of Institutional Trust

Several authors have pointed out that further research is needed to provide a more nuanced understanding of how embeddedness and employee withdrawal intention are related (Meuer et al., Reference Meuer, Tröster, Angstmann, Backes-Gellner and Pull2019; Tharenou & Caulfield, Reference Tharenou and Caulfield2010). As we argued above, the relationship between SIEs and host country can be viewed through the lens of SET and norm of reciprocity. Given that one of the outcomes of mutually beneficial social exchange is trust development (see Lambe et al., Reference Lambe, Wittmann and Spekman2001), when expatriates perceive that the host country ‘delivers’ what they expected from it in terms of career prospects, financial rewards, and comfortable lifestyle, they are likely to reciprocate by developing a positive attitude toward the host country and its attributes. More specifically, we argue that in such circumstances SIEs are likely to develop a sense of perceived institutional trust toward the host country.

Institutional trust refers to the extent to which individuals assume institutions to carry out the tasks set out for them (Shantz, Wang, & Malik, Reference Shantz, Wang and Malik2018). Extant research on trust in public institutions has consistently shown that the perceived performance of and satisfaction with public services is positively related to institutional trust (Van Ryzin, Reference Van Ryzin2007; Vigoda-Gadot &Yuval, Reference Vigoda-Gadot and Yuval2003). A crucial element through which institutional trust is formed among residents of a particular country is public service experiences (Van der Walle & Bouckaert, Reference Van der Walle and Bouckaert2003). It highlights the fact that despite possible pre-existing or expected levels of institutional trust, the actual degree of institutional trust among residents toward public institutions in a particular country is formed in the process of these residents interacting with these institutions and experiencing its public services (Christensen & Lægreid, Reference Christensen and Lægreid2005).

Applying this argument to the SIE case, it means that when SIEs experience high levels of career and/or community embeddedness, thus implying good career prospects and a decent lifestyle that the host country provides, they will attribute it to well-functioning host country institutions and their experiences of interacting with these institutions will be perceived as positive. SET postulates that high-quality social exchange relationships result in higher levels of trust between the parties involved, and – in turn – trust leads to longer-term commitments in social exchanges (Lambe et al., Reference Lambe, Wittmann and Spekman2001; Molm, Reference Molm, Ritzer and Smart2000, Reference Molm2003). In line with this, the more embedded SIEs are in the host country – as a result of the host country offering (‘delivering’) the opportunity to become embedded – the more likely they will perceive the host country's institutions to be trustworthy and want to continue living and working in the host country. Therefore, we hypothesize:

Hypothesis 2a: SIEs’ host country institutional trust mediates the relationship between SIEs’ host country career embeddedness and host country withdrawal intention.

Hypothesis 2b: SIEs’ host country institutional trust mediates the relationship between SIEs’ host country community embeddedness and host country withdrawal intention.

The Mediating Mechanism of Workplace Discrimination

Expatriation research has for a long time acknowledged that to adjust to and to feel psychologically comfortable in the new work and non-work environment, SIEs need to be able to deal effectively with its constituents, such as the host country nationals, namely co-workers and employers, and with their mistrust and suspicion rooted in the foreign status of SIEs and their cultural differences (see Moeller & Harvey, Reference Moeller and Harvey2011). Relations between foreign employees and host country nationals are often characterized by power imbalances (Heizmann, Fee, & Gray, Reference Heizmann, Fee and Gray2018), whereby the latter perceive SIEs as ‘outsiders’ and ‘exploiters’ (Toh & Denisi, Reference Toh and Denisi2007), socially exclude (Köllen, Koch, & Hack, Reference Köllen, Koch and Hack2020) and culturally stigmatize them (Moeller & Harvey, Reference Moeller and Harvey2011), and exhibit hostility and ethnocentric bias toward them both inside and outside work (Syed, Hazboun, & Murray, Reference Syed, Hazboun and Murray2014). Furthermore, employers tend to perceive SIEs as neither committed to nor identified with their local organizations to the same extent as local employees or assigned expatriates (Lu et al., Reference Lu, Saka-Helmhout and Piekkari2019; Zhang & Rienties, Reference Zhang and Rienties2017). As a result, SIEs often experience discrimination at the workplace in the host countries (see Al Ariss & Özbilgin, Reference Al Ariss and Özbilgin2010; Bader et al., Reference Bader, Stoermer, Bader and Schuster2018; Hussain & Deery, Reference Hussain and Deery2018; Rodriguez & Scurry, Reference Rodriguez and Scurry2014).

Yet, when the host country ‘delivers’ what SIEs expect in terms of career prospects, financial rewards, and lifestyle, in line with SET, we can expect SIEs to reciprocate by being more tolerant toward possible negative features of the host country. Perceived discrimination offers a relevant example in this respect. Research on perceived workplace discrimination found that perceived organizational justice decreases perceived discrimination among foreign employees in the workplace (Enoksen, Reference Enoksen2016). Interestingly, studies underscore the importance of personal experiences with fairness and justice in employees’ interpretations of the experiences of others subjected to injustice (Kray & Lind, Reference Kray and Lind2002; Lind, Kray, & Thompson, Reference Lind, Kray and Thompson1998). Similarly, research shows that employees are likely to perceive higher levels of workplace bullying – a phenomenon related to discrimination – when they experience a psychological contract breach or violation and lower levels when their psychological contracts are fulfilled (Salin & Notelaers, Reference Salin and Notelaers2020).

This suggests that employees adjust their attitudes and reactions to organizational treatment either downward or upward depending on whether they perceive it as unfavorable or favorable, respectively (Robinson, Reference Robinson, Baling and Cooper2008). Extending this line of argumentation to our research context, it seems plausible that SIEs will be likely to perceive higher levels of workplace discrimination when their expectations from the host country are not fulfilled. Vice versa, SIEs will be less likely to perceive and acknowledge workplace discrimination in the host country as a problem when their host country expectations are fulfilled and manifested in high levels of host country embeddedness. In this way, SIEs’ host country embeddedness decreases perceived workplace discrimination and through that contributes to the likelihood of SIEs staying in the host country. Thus, we hypothesize the following:

Hypothesis 3a: SIEs’ host country perceived discrimination mediates the relationship between SIEs’ host country career embeddedness and host country withdrawal intention.

Hypothesis 3b: SIEs’ host country perceived discrimination mediates the relationship between SIEs’ host country community embeddedness and host country withdrawal intention.

METHODS

Sample

Data for this study were collected in 2020 from SIEs living and working in the UAE, one of the global expatriation hubs (Budhwar, Pereira, Mellahi, & Singh, Reference Budhwar, Pereira, Mellahi and Singh2019) where close to 90% of the population are of foreign origin (Global Media Insight, 2022). For this study, we created an online questionnaire in English that was distributed to potential respondents fulfilling our sampling criteria which were in line with Cerdin and Selmer (Reference Cerdin and Selmer2014): the respondents had to be of foreign origin, living and working in the UAE full time, staying in the UAE for less than 10 years (to minimize the ‘going native’ effect), and having at least an undergraduate degree. The questionnaire was sent out to 4868 expatriates using a social network platform (Facebook) and we received 451 responses. The response rate was thus 9%. Among our respondents, 50% were female, the average age was 38.86 (ranging from 23 to 64), 24% had children under 18 years old, and 78% had a spouse. In terms of job positions, 7% were top managers, 16% were line managers, 29% were specialists, and 48% were worked in various service-oriented positions (e.g., teacher, salesperson, nurse, etc.). The three biggest industries represented in our sample were education and research (18%), healthcare (14%), and tourism and hospitality (14%). Other industries were sales and retail (9%), technology and engineering (8%), logistics and transportation (8%), banking and finance (7%), food and agriculture (6%), heavy industries (6%), construction (5%), fashion and design (4%), and manufacturing and textile (3%). In terms of origin, 8% were from Africa, 44% were from Southeast Asia, 28% were from South Asia, 15% were from Europe, and 5% were from North America and Australia. The average time spent in the UAE was 4.13 years.

Measures

All the measures used in this study have been validated in previous studies (see Appendix I). All items were measured on a 5-point Likert scale from ‘1’ – ‘not at all’ to ‘5’ – ‘extremely’.

Host country embeddedness

We measured embeddedness using six items adapted from Tharenou and Caulfield (Reference Tharenou and Caulfield2010), three items each for career and community embeddedness. Sample items: ‘The professional opportunities I have in the UAE’ and ‘The lifestyle of the UAE’.

Institutional trust

We measured institutional trust using the scale from the European Quality of Life Survey (2016). It measures the extent to which respondents trust eight aspects of the institutional environment of their host country. Sample item: ‘The news media’.

Workplace discrimination

We measured workplace discrimination using six items from James, Lovato, and Cropanzano (Reference James, Lovato and Cropanzano1994). Sample item: ‘At work people are intolerant of others from different racial / ethnic / cultural groups’.

Host country withdrawal intentions

We measured intentions by three items adapted from Zhang, George, and Chan (Reference Zhang, George and Chan2006). We rephrased the items to ask the respondents about their intentions in leaving the host country. Sample item: ‘I often think about leaving the UAE’.

Controls

We controlled for demographics (age, gender), having relatives apart, and the time spent in the country. Age was measured as the continuous and chronological age of the respondent. Gender was measured as a dummy variable standing for ‘1’ if the respondent was female and ‘0’ otherwise. Living away from one's family might influence expatriates’ withdrawal intention, especially if the decision to expatriate has been based on monetary gains. Correspondingly, if expatriates had their spouse and/or children apart, we coded having relatives apart as ‘1’ and ‘0’ otherwise. Finally, the time spent in the country might imply both seniority and ‘going native’ (Brewster & Pickard, Reference Brewster and Pickard1994), both aspects that can influence withdrawal intention (seniority might imply SIEs are better able to adjust to external shocks while going native might suggest SIEs no longer consider repatriation an option). The time spent in the country was measured as a continuous variable (in years).

Quality of Measurements

Cronbach's alphas, composite reliability (CR), average variance explained (AVE), and discriminant validity (DV) were calculated for each of our constructs. Cronbach's alphas and CRs were greater than 0.7, AVE scores were greater than 0.5, and DV was larger than the correlations between constructs. Therefore, the reliability, convergent validity, and DV of our measures were demonstrated. Table 1 reports descriptive statistics, measurement validity indexes, and correlations for the variables in our model.

Table 1. Descriptive statistics, measures validity, and correlations

Notes: N = 451. Alpha, Cronbach's alpha; CR, composite reliability; AVE, average variance explained; DV, discriminant validity.

Correlation coefficients larger than 0.080 are significant at p < 0.05 level.

Confirmatory Analyses and Common Method Bias

To assess the quality of our model, we conducted a series of confirmatory analyses and compared our theoretical model with other alternatives, as shown in Table 2. We found that the theoretical model (five-factor model: career embeddedness, community embeddedness, institutional trust, workplace discrimination, and withdrawal intention) had a better fit than other configurations.

Table 2. Confirmatory analyses and common method variance examination

Notes: One-factor model, all items on one single factor; Four-factor model, the two dimensions of embeddedness together; Five-factor model, each item on their theoretical construct (chosen model); ULMC model, each item on their theoretical construct and on a latent method construct.

Furthermore, as our study uses self-reported data, it is, therefore, possible that the common method variance bias could potentially inflate the correlations between our variables. Aware of this possible risk, we used the unmeasured latent method construct (ULMC) method to evaluate the common source variance bias and verify the validity of our results (Williams & McGonagle, Reference Williams and McGonagle2016). To do so, we performed a confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) where each item was associated with both its theoretical construct and with a latent method construct (see Table 2). Breaking down the total amount of variance (see Williams, Cote, & Buckley, Reference Williams, Cote and Buckley1989), our results show that the variance associated with the latent method construct was inferior to 10%, therefore much smaller than the threshold of 25% (Williams et al., Reference Williams, Cote and Buckley1989). Therefore, we can conclude that the common method variance bias does not represent a substantial threat for the interpretation of our results.

RESULTS

The structural five-factor model fitted our data well: Chi-square = 568.35, df = 200, CFI = 0.95, RMSEA = 0.06. The results are presented in Table 3 and illustrated in Figure 1. Among our control variables, gender and age were found to be negative and significantly associated with country withdrawal intention (respectively, b = −0.114, p = 0.009 and b = −0.179, p = 0.000) while having relatives apart and time spent in the country were found to be associated positively and significantly (respectively, b = 0.084, p = 0.041 and b = 0.073, p = 0.042). Hypotheses 1a and 1b, stating that SIEs’ (a) career and (b) community embeddedness is negatively associated with SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention, were confirmed (total effects: b = −0.163, p = 0.003 and b = −0.336, p = 0.000, respectively).

Figure 1. Theoretical framework and summary results Notes: Direct effects; ° total effects; p-values in brackets.

Table 3. Estimations and mediation analysis

Notes: N = 451; Country withdrawal R-square = 0.33.

Furthermore, SIEs’ (a) career and (b) community embeddedness was both positively associated with SIEs’ institutional trust (b = 0.355, p = 0.000 and b = 0.159, p = 0.002). It implies that as we expected both types of embeddedness increase SIEs’ perceived institutional trust. In turn, institutional trust was negatively associated with SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention (b = −0.150, p = 0.009). The indirect effects of career and community embeddedness through institutional trust were as follows: b = −0.053 (p = 0.010) and b = −0.024 (p = 0.109), respectively. Therefore, only Hypothesis 2a, stating that SIEs’ institutional trust mediates the relationships between SIEs’ career embeddedness and expatriation withdrawal intention, was confirmed. Hypothesis 2b was rejected.

Then, SIEs’ (a) career and (b) community embeddedness was both negatively associated with SIEs’ perceived workplace discrimination (b = −0.246, p = 0.000 and b = −0.078, p = 0.223 respectively). Again, it means that our expectation that higher embeddedness would lead to lower perceptions of workplace discrimination was correct, although the effect of community embeddedness was negative but nonsignificant. Moreover, expectedly, perceived discrimination was positively associated with SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention (b = 0.278, p = 0.000). The indirect effects of career and community embeddedness through perceived discrimination were as follows: b = −0.069 (p = 0.000) and b = −0.022 (p = 0.255), respectively. Thus, Hypothesis 3a, stating that SIEs’ perceived discrimination mediates the relationships between SIEs’ career embeddedness and expatriation withdrawal intention, was confirmed. Hypothesis 3b, stating a similar relationship between community embeddedness and expatriation withdrawal intention, was rejected.

DISCUSSION

Theoretical Advances

In this study, we have explored two mechanisms that partially explain how SIEs’ career and community embeddedness influence their withdrawal intention. More specifically, we examined the mediating roles of institutional trust and workplace discrimination. To theorize the proposed relationships, we employed SET to conceptualize the relationship between SIEs and their host country as a form of social exchange governed by the principle of reciprocity. We found that both career and community embeddedness were directly and negatively related to SIEs’ host country withdrawal intentions, yet community embeddedness had a larger effect size (respectively, f2 = 0.069, small effect, and f2 = 0.151, median effect; Cohen, Reference Cohen1988). We also found that both institutional trust and perceived workplace discrimination mediated the relationships between SIEs’ career embeddedness and host country withdrawal intention. There was no significant mediation in the case of community embeddedness. All in all, our study contributes to extant literature on SIEs and expatriates more generally in three ways.

First, at a more general level, we propose a novel way to conceptualize and theorize the relationship between the expatriate and host country as a form of social exchange driven by the norm of reciprocity. The proposed perspective complements well extant studies that have predominantly focused on social exchanges in the expatriate–employer relationship and attributed a peripheral or contextual role to the host country (see, e.g., Kang & Shen, Reference Kang and Shen2018; Mahajan & Toh, Reference Mahajan and Toh2014; Peltokorpi & Froese, Reference Peltokorpi and Froese2014). It points toward the relevance of assigning a more important (almost agentic) role to the host country that has thus far been largely reduced to its cultural dimension.

Second, as opposed to the predominant focus on job embeddedness in the extant expatriation literature (see Crossley et al., Reference Crossley, Bennett, Jex and Burnfield2007; Stoermer et al., Reference Stoermer, Davies and Froese2021), we adopted a broader definition of embeddedness by incorporating both career and community dimensions. We believe the two represent better the realities and aspirations of expatriates whose motivations to relocate are well acknowledged not to be limited to mere employment in one specific organization (Andresen et al., Reference Andresen, Biemann and Pattie2015). We found that both career and community embeddedness were directly and negatively related to SIEs’ withdrawal intention. Both types of embeddedness were also positively related to the SIEs’ level of institutional trust which, in turn, was negatively related to SIEs’ withdrawal intention. Thus, we found evidence of partial mediation in the case of institutional trust. However, our analysis showed that only career embeddedness was negatively and significantly related to perceived workplace discrimination which, in turn, was positively and significantly associated with host country withdrawal intention. The relationship between community embeddedness and workplace discrimination was nonsignificant.

From the SET's point of view, a high degree of SIEs’ career embeddedness is likely to be perceived favorably by SIEs and as an attractive and appreciated feature of the host country. Indeed, even though it is acknowledged that not every SIE is driven in his/her decisions to relocate abroad solely by career-related motivations (Doherty et al., Reference Doherty, Dickmann and Mills2011), several studies emphasized the importance and value of career implications of such relocations for SIEs, namely career capital accumulation and career competences development (Al Ariss et al., Reference Al Ariss, Koall, Özbilgin, Suutari, Cao, Hirschi and Deller2012; Jokinen et al., Reference Jokinen, Brewster and Suutari2008; Rodriguez & Scurry, Reference Rodriguez and Scurry2014). Thus, our finding adds to this literature suggesting that indeed – even though it might not be the primary initial motive for relocation – when realized, career embeddedness becomes an important factor in SIEs’ decisions whether to remain in the host country or not. It also extends the recent research by Hussain and Deery (Reference Hussain and Deery2018) who found SIEs’ job embeddedness to affect their job turnover intentions by suggesting that this effect also applies to SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention (see also Meuer et al., Reference Meuer, Tröster, Angstmann, Backes-Gellner and Pull2019).

Furthermore, our results show that community embeddedness is crucial for SIEs’ decision to stay in the host country as well. As many SIEs relocate for more diverse than purely career-related reasons (Doherty et al., Reference Doherty, Dickmann and Mills2011; Richardson & McKenna, Reference Richardson and McKenna2002), the extent to which they feel comfortable socially in the host country and feel a sense of belongingness is an important factor determining their withdrawal intentions (see also Lo et al., Reference Lo, Wong, Yam and Whitfield2012). When community embeddedness happens at a high level or, in other words, when the host country provides good preconditions for this to occur, SIEs seem to appreciate it and are less inclined to repatriate.

Third, and in contrast to the extant body of knowledge, our study goes beyond these results and elucidates two mechanisms through which SIEs’ embeddedness transforms into lower withdrawal intention. The effects of embeddedness on expatriate outcomes have been undertheorized and underexplored in previous studies and more research has been called for (Hussain & Deery, Reference Hussain and Deery2018; Meuer et al., Reference Meuer, Tröster, Angstmann, Backes-Gellner and Pull2019). Conceptualizing the relationship between SIEs and host country as a form of social exchange, our analysis shows that career embeddedness increases SIEs’ intention to stay in the host country by facilitating SIEs’ institutional trust and making them more tolerant toward any workplace discrimination that they experience or witness. We see these two effects as two types of SIE psychological reciprocation to the host country. In this way, we offer novel insights into how embeddedness affects the perceptions of expatriates regarding the host country's institutions and workplace discrimination, making expatriates more complacent and tolerant, respectively. Adopting the SET's perspective allows us to theorize and empirically verify the reciprocal nature of these perceptions – when expatriates feel that the host country ‘delivers’ value to them, they ‘pay back’ by being more tolerant and trustful toward the host country and its characteristics.

Only a few extant expatriation studies have thus far considered the role of institutional environments and factors in expatriates’ experience and success (Dahlberg & Linde, Reference Dahlberg and Linde2018; Wang, Freeman, & Zhu, Reference Wang, Freeman and Zhu2013). Adding to these studies, our analysis shows that once SIEs become well embedded in the host country in terms of their career prospects as well as socially, their trust in local institutions grows. It means that these SIEs start to see positively the host country's laws, regulations, and political environment as well as its judicial system and media. And in emerging markets, such as the UAE, such trust is not straightforward, as research indicates. For instance, in a study of SIEs in the UAE, Forstenlechner (Reference Forstenlechner2010) reported that most respondents felt that getting into a traffic accident with a local counterpart would almost without any exception result in the SIE being found guilty. Against this evidence, SIEs’ trust in well-functioning and fair local institutions in countries like the UAE is a powerful factor in determining their withdrawal intention. Increased institutional trust also implies that to some extent well embedded SIEs are likely to be more accepting toward various culturally embedded rules and behavioral norms, which then leads us to the second mediating mechanism in our model – perceived workplace discrimination.

Our analysis indicates that being well embedded in the host country in terms of career prospects makes SIEs also more tolerant toward workplace discrimination. As such, despite the UAE's reputation as a haven for expatriates, it is also known that discrimination against expatriates by host country nationals and employers is common in the UAE (see Al-Waqfi & Forstenlechner, Reference Al-Waqfi and Forstenlechner2010; Rees et al., Reference Rees, Mamman and Braik2007; Singh et al., Reference Singh, Edward Pereira, Mellahi and Collings2021). Therefore, career embeddedness seems to be an influential factor in determining the extent to which SIEs perceive it as being problematic. Having good career prospects offered by the host country, SIEs appear to pay less attention to workplace discrimination against them and other foreigners. It might also imply that such SIEs become better adjusted to the host work and cultural environment and, to some extent, start to perceive certain things, which were initially seen as unjust or unacceptable, as normal and taken-for-granted. Interestingly, we did not find community embeddedness to decrease perceived workplace discrimination. This might be explained by the notion that most expatriates in the UAE tend to socialize with similar others (Forstenlechner, Reference Forstenlechner2010). As a result, higher community embeddedness decreases the SIE's intention to leave the host country, but it appears that the mechanisms through which community embeddedness does so are neither work- nor institutional context-related and might be associated more with the quality and extent of the SIE's social capital and network.

Managerial and Policy Implications

Our findings point toward several managerial and policy implications. Employers are advised to invest in facilitating SIEs’ embeddedness in terms of both career prospects and communal lifestyle. By being certain about their work-related prospects and security as well as developing a wide network of social contacts is likely to make SIEs less willing to leave the host country. It will make it easier for host country employers to retain SIEs and secure the pool of competences and skills that they offer. Furthermore, governments can collaborate with local organizations to incentivize talent management practices that also contribute to developing local talents as well as ensuring a positive representation of host country nationals in foreign-owned organizations’ top management (as per Pinnington et al., Reference Pinnington, Alshamsi, Özbilgin, Tatli, Vassilopoulou, Vaiman, Sparrow, Schuler and Collings2018). Once again, it boils down to the general need for host country organizations to support SIEs not only in matters directly related to their work-related responsibilities and tasks but more broadly given that these expatriates relocate to a new and unfamiliar country and require assistance in navigating and embedding themselves. Even though it is often seen as not a direct responsibility of the employer, providing help in such matters as potential legal disputes, healthcare-related issues, and real-estate purchases might be effective in increasing the likelihood of SIEs staying in the host country and subsequently might pay off for the employer willing to invest in arranging such help.

Echoing this point, Inkson, Arthur, Pringle, and Barry (Reference Inkson, Arthur, Pringle and Barry1997: 365) urged HR managers and firms in general to shift their thinking from ensuring that SIEs do not leave to fostering a relationship that enables both parties to reap its benefits. In more concrete terms, we suggest HR managers liaise with the host country government to ensure that the public sector is aware of institutional factors influencing the SIEs’ withdrawal intentions. For instance, as we noted above, in the UAE, as well as in several other Gulf countries, there is a growing tendency and calls to replace foreign workforce with local talents in order to ensure a sustainable transition to a post-oil economy (Haak-Saheem, Reference Haak-Saheem2020; Sparrow, Vaiman, Schuler, & Collings, Reference Sparrow, Vaiman, Schuler, Collings, Vaiman, Sparrow, Schuler and Collings2018). Such initiatives are likely to affect SIEs’ embeddedness negatively and host country employers need to proactively invest in ensuring that SIEs feel embedded in the local context if these employers desire retaining their foreign employees.

The implications of our research also extend beyond the context of the UAE to other transforming economies, such as China, India, and Brazil. Like the UAE, many transforming economies are often characterized by lack of institutional transparency, certain prejudice toward foreign employees, and cultural idiosyncrasies (Ulziisukh & Wei, Reference Ulziisukh and Wei2022). These factors can push many SIEs ending up living in ‘expatriate ghettoes’, which are formed when expatriates choose to live in the same area as other expatriates and where they spend their leisure time with other expatriates (see Hutchings, Michailova, & Harrison, Reference Hutchings, Michailova and Harrison2013). Similar to the context of the UAE, it could be equally beneficial for host organizations in other transforming economies if they could facilitate the career and community embeddedness of SIEs into the host country context outside of such ‘expatriate ghettoes’ (see DiTomaso & Bian, Reference DiTomaso and Bian2018). In line with our research, locally embedded SIEs will have more positive attitudes toward their host country experiences, thus making it more likely for host organizations to retain SIEs.

Limitations and Future Research Directions

Our study has several limitations that could also be seen as avenues for further research. First, our analysis is based on single-source data. To evaluate the extent to which the common method variance bias might affect our analysis, we conducted statistical tests. Their results indicate that the bias is not likely to significantly affect the interpretation of our findings. Second, our sample consists of SIEs. Future research might examine how the relationships that we theorized and tested in this study generalize and compare to the case of corporate expatriates.

Third, we analyzed SIEs in one host country only. Although we believe that our findings are largely generalizable to other expatriate-attractive emerging markets such as China, Russia, or India, future research needs to examine whether and how the relationships tested in our study function in other host countries with different cultural and institutional contexts. Similarly, we believe that the general mechanisms that we outline in our model are likely to apply also to other groups of expatriates which are common in the UAE such as corporate, low skilled, and so-called hidden expatriates. However, there are also likely to be differences in how the mechanisms in our model will operate among these different groups of expatriates not least because these groups are impacted differently by nationalization policies, which tend to target mostly higher-level and managerial positions (Haak-Saheem & Brewster, Reference Haak-Saheem and Brewster2017), and are thus likely to experience workplace discrimination and career opportunities differently in the UAE (Haak-Saheem et al., Reference Haak-Saheem, Woodrow and Brewster2021). Thus, future research needs to verify the applicability of our model to other groups of expatriates in the UAE.

Fourth, research indicates that individuals tend to trust different institutions differently. For instance, Rothstein and Stolle (Reference Rothstein and Stolle2008) differentiate between partisan (e.g., parliament), order (e.g., police), and power checking (e.g., media and press) institutions and argue that individuals trust these institutions differently. In this study, we used an aggregate measure of institutional trust and to complement our study future research should examine whether there are differences in how expatriates trust different institutions in the host country.

Fifth, external shocks (e.g., terrorism, pandemics, natural disasters) could also impact the relationship between expatriates and the host country. While such events are challenging to foresee and influence, future inquiries could investigate how external shocks either strengthen or weaken expatriates’ embeddedness and withdrawal intentions. For instance, Algarni et al. (Reference Algarni, Alzahrani, Alatawi, Alasmari, Alsaab, Almalki, Alhifany and Althobaiti2021) found that during the COVID-19 pandemic expatriates in Saudi Arabia experienced an increased reduction in psychological well-being compared with Saudi citizens, thus suggesting expatriates to be somewhat more exposed to certain external shocks than host country nationals.

Sixth, we did not differentiate between cultural distances and differences among our respondents’ home countries and the host country of the UAE. Future research should look into this issue for perceived cultural distance might moderate the relationships that we examined in our study. Seventh, it might be that SIE experiences and embeddedness possibilities are likely to differ depending on the industry where SIEs operate and the job position that they occupy. For instance, the experiences and possibilities for career embeddedness of a hotel receptionist are likely to be different than those of a line manager working in an investment bank. Yet, we have not examined these possible differences in our study and future research might engage with these differences more deeply.

Finally, despite the fact that our model explained 33% of the variance in SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention, other factors also contribute to such intentions and need to be identified and explored in future research. Moreover, future studies should explore other possible mediating, for example organizational commitment and/or well-being, or moderating, for example age and/or gender, mechanisms explaining how embeddedness influences SIEs’ host country withdrawal intention as well as other relevant outcomes.

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author, Alexei Koveshnikov, upon reasonable request.

APPENDIX I

Measures

Country withdrawal (Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, George and Chan2006)

Please indicate the extent to which you agree or disagree with each statement (1 – not at all; 5 – extremely): 1. I often think about leaving the UAE; 2. I will probably look for a new place to relocate soon; 3. I cannot imagine that I shall live in the UAE for a long time.

Host country embeddedness (Tharenou & Caulfield, Reference Tharenou and Caulfield2010)

If you would have to leave the UAE, to what extent would the following be losses or sacrifices to you? Please indicate the extent to which you agree or disagree with each statement (1 – not at all; 5 – extremely): Career embeddedness – 1. The career and development opportunities I have in the UAE; 2. The money I earn or can earn in the UAE; 3. The professional opportunities I have in the UAE. Community embeddedness – 1. The range of social activities and events I have in the UAE; 2. The friends and social ties I have in the UAE; 3. The lifestyle of the UAE.

Institutional trust (European Quality of Life Survey, 2016)

Please indicate the extent to which you trust each of the following institutions in the UAE (1 – not at all; 5 – extremely): 1. The parliament; 2. The legal system; 3. The news media; 4. The police; 5. The government; 6. The local (municipal) authorities; 7. Banks; 8. Humanitarian or charitable organizations.

Workplace discrimination (James et al., Reference James, Lovato and Cropanzano1994)

Please indicate the extent to which you agree or disagree with each statement (1 – not at all; 5 – extremely): 1. Where I work all employees are treated the same, regardless of their racial/ethnic/cultural group (R); 2. At work I feel socially isolated because of my racial/ethnic/cultural group; 3. At work minority employees receive fewer opportunities; 4. At work people are intolerant of others from different racial/ethnic/cultural groups; 5. Supervisors scrutinize the work of members of my group more than that of members of other racial/ethnic/cultural groups; 6. There is discrimination where I work.

Footnotes

ACCEPTED BY Senior Editor Ilya Okhmatovskiy

This research received financial support from HSE Foundation and Foundation for Economic Education (both Finland).

References

REFERENCES

Al Ariss, A., & Özbilgin, M. 2010. Understanding self-initiated expatriates: Career experiences of Lebanese self-initiated expatriates in France. Thunderbird International Business Review, 52(4): 275285.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Al Ariss, A., Koall, I., Özbilgin, M., Suutari, V., Cao, L., Hirschi, A., & Deller, J. 2012. Self-initiated expatriates and their career success. Journal of Management Development, 31(2): 159172.Google Scholar
Al-Dosary, A. S. 2004. HRD or manpower policy? Options for government intervention in the local labor market that depends upon a foreign labor force: The Saudi Arabian perspective. Human Resource Development International, 7(1): 123135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Al-Esia, Z., & Skok, W. 2014. Arab knowledge sharing in a multicultural workforce: A dual case study in the UAE. Arabian Journal of Business and Management Review, 4(4): 110.Google Scholar
Al-Lamki, S. M. 1998. Barriers to Omanization in the private sector: The perceptions of Omani graduates. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 9(2): 377400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Al-Waqfi, M. A., & Forstenlechner, I. 2010. Stereotyping of citizens in an expatriate-dominated labour market. Employee Relations, 32(4): 364381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Al-Waqfi, M. A., & Forstenlechner, I. 2014. Barriers to Emiratization: The role of policy design and institutional environment in determining the effectiveness of Emiratization. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25(2): 167189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Algarni, M. A., Alzahrani, M. S., Alatawi, Y., Alasmari, R. A., Alsaab, H. O., Almalki, A. H., Alhifany, A. A., & Althobaiti, Y. S. 2021. Perception of threat and psychological impact of COVID-19 among expatriates in Makkah Region, Saudi Arabia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(12): 6650.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Alsarhan, F., & Valax, M. 2020. Conceptualization of wasta and its main consequences on human resource management. International Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Finance and Management, 14(1): 114127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andresen, M. 2015. What determines expatriates’ performance while abroad? The role of job embeddedness. Journal of Global Mobility, 3(1): 6282.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andresen, M., Biemann, T., & Pattie, M. W. 2015. What makes them move abroad? Reviewing and exploring differences between self-initiated and assigned expatriation. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 26(7): 932947.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andresen, M., Goldmann, P., & Volodina, A. 2018. Do overwhelmed expatriates intend to leave? The effects of sensory processing sensitivity, stress, and social capital on expatriates’ turnover intention. European Management Review, 15(3): 315328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andresen, M., Bergdolt, F., Margenfeld, J., & Dickmann, M. 2014. Addressing international mobility confusion – Developing definitions and differentiations for self-initiated and assigned expatriates as well as migrants. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25(16): 22952318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bader, B. 2015. The power of support in high-risk countries: Compensation and social support as antecedents of expatriate work attitudes. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 26(13): 17121736.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bader, B., Stoermer, S., Bader, A. K., & Schuster, T. 2018. Institutional discrimination of women and workplace harassment of female expatriates. Journal of Global Mobility, 6(1): 4058.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhaskar-Shrinivas, P., Harrison, D. A., Shaffer, M. A., & Luk, D. M. 2005. Input-based and time-based models of international adjustment: Meta-analytic evidence and theoretical extensions. Academy of Management Journal, 48(2): 257281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blau, P. 1964. Justice in social exchange. Sociological Inquiry, 34(2): 193206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brewster, C., & Pickard, J. 1994. Evaluating expatriate training. International Studies of Management & Organization, 24(3): 1835.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Budhwar, P., Pereira, V., Mellahi, K., & Singh, S. K. 2019. The state of HRM in the Middle East: Challenges and future research agenda. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 36(4): 905933.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cao, L., Hirschi, A., & Deller, J. 2014. Perceived organizational support and intention to stay in host countries among self-initiated expatriates: The role of career satisfaction and networks. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25(14): 20132032.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cerdin, J. L., & Pargneux, M. L. 2010. Career anchors: A comparison between organization-assigned and self-initiated expatriates. Thunderbird International Business Review, 52(4): 287299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cerdin, J. L., & Selmer, J. 2014. Who is a self-initiated expatriate? Towards conceptual clarity of a common notion. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25(9): 12811301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, H. F. 2010. The relationships of organizational justice, social exchange, psychological contract, and expatriate adjustment: an example of Taiwanese business expatriates. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 21(7): 10901107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Y. P., & Shaffer, M. A. 2017. The influences of perceived organizational support and motivation on self-initiated expatriates’ organizational and community embeddedness. Journal of World Business, 52(2): 197208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christensen, T., & Lægreid, P. 2005. Trust in government: The relative importance of service satisfaction, political factors, and demography. Public Performance & Management Review, 28(4): 487511.Google Scholar
Cohen, J. 1988. Statistical power analysis for the behavioral sciences, 2nd ed. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.Google Scholar
Cropanzano, R., & Mitchell, M. S. 2005. Social exchange theory: An interdisciplinary review. Journal of Management, 31(6): 874900.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cropanzano, R., & Rupp, D. E. 2008. Social exchange theory and organizational justice: Job performance, citizenship behaviors, multiple foci, and a historical integration of two literatures. In Gilliland, S., Steiner, D. D., & Skarlicki, D. P. (Eds.), Research in social issues in management: Justice, morality, and social responsibility: 6399. Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing, Inc.Google Scholar
Cropanzano, R., Byrne, Z. S., Bobocel, D. R., & Rupp, D. E. 2001. Moral virtues, fairness heuristics, social entities, and other denizens of organizational justice. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 58(2): 164209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cropanzano, R., Chrobot-Mason, D., Rupp, D. E., & Prehar, C. A. 2004. Accountability for corporate injustice. Human Resource Management Review, 14(1): 107133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crossley, C. D., Bennett, R. J., Jex, S. M., & Burnfield, J. L. 2007. Development of a global measure of job embeddedness and integration into a traditional model of voluntary turnover. Journal of Applied Psychology, 92(4): 10311042.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dahlberg, S., & Linde, J. 2018. Socialization or experience? Institutional trust and satisfaction with democracy among emigrants in different institutional settings. The Journal of Politics, 80(4): 13891393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davies, S. E., Stoermer, S., & Froese, F. J. 2019. When the going gets tough: The influence of expatriate resilience and perceived organizational inclusion climate on work adjustment and turnover intentions. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 30(8): 13931417.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DiTomaso, N., & Bian, Y. 2018. The structure of labor markets in the US and China: Social capital and guanxi. Management and Organization Review, 14(1): 536.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doherty, N. 2013. Understanding the self-initiated expatriate: A review and directions for future research. International Journal of Management Reviews, 15(4): 447469.Google Scholar
Doherty, N., Dickmann, M., & Mills, T. 2011. Exploring the motives of company-backed and self-initiated expatriates. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 22(3): 595611.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doherty, N., Richardson, J., & Thorn, K. 2013. Self-initiated expatriation and self-initiated expatriates. Career Development International, 18(1): 97112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dubai Statistics Center. 2020. Population and vital statistics. [Cited 23 December 2021]. Available from URL: https://www.dsc.gov.ae/en-us/Themes/Pages/Population-and-Vital-Statistics.aspx?Theme=42Google Scholar
The Economist. 2021. The Gulf states offer citizenship to a select group of foreigners. [Cited 28 December 2021]. Available from URL: https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2021/12/09/the-gulf-states-offer-citizenship-to-a-select-group-of-foreignersGoogle Scholar
Elbanna, S. 2021. Policy and practical implications for workforce nationalization in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries. Personnel Review, 51(4). doi:10.1108/PR-11-2020-0835Google Scholar
Emerson, R. M. 1976. Social exchange theory. Annual Review of Sociology, 2(1): 335362.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enoksen, E. 2016. Perceived discrimination against immigrants in the workplace. Equality. Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal, 35(2): 6680.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
European Quality of Life Survey. 2016. Quality of life, quality of public services and quality of society. Luxembourg: Publication Office of the European Union.Google Scholar
Faeth, P. C., & Kittler, M. G. 2020. Expatriate management in hostile environments from a multi-stakeholder perspective – A systematic review. Journal of Global Mobility, 8(1): 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fee, A., & Gray, S. J. 2020. Perceived organizational support and performance: The case of expatriate development volunteers in complex multi-stakeholder employment relationships. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 33(5): 965-1004.Google Scholar
Forstenlechner, I. 2010. Exploring expatriates’ behavioural reaction to institutional injustice on host country level. Personnel Review, 39(2): 178194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Global Media Insight. 2022. United Arab Emirates population statistics 2022. [Cited 25 June 2021]. Available from URL: https://www.globalmediainsight.com/blog/uae-population-statistics/Google Scholar
Haak-Saheem, W. 2020. Talent management in Covid-19 crisis: How Dubai manages and sustains its global talent pool. Asian Business & Management, 19: 298301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haak-Saheem, W., & Brewster, C. 2017. ‘Hidden’ expatriates: International mobility in the United Arab Emirates as a challenge to current understanding of expatriation. Human Resource Management Journal, 27(3): 423439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haak-Saheem, W., Festing, M., & Darwish, T. K. 2017. International human resource management in the Arab Gulf States – An institutional perspective. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 28(18): 26842712.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haak-Saheem, W., Woodrow, C., & Brewster, C. 2021. Low-status expatriates in the United Arab Emirates: A psychological contract perspective. The International Journal of Human Resource Management. doi:10.1080/09585192.2021.1983632Google Scholar
Haslberger, A., Brewster, C., & Hippler, T. 2013. The dimensions of expatriate adjustment. Human Resource Management, 52(3): 333351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heizmann, H., Fee, A., & Gray, S. J. 2018. Intercultural knowledge sharing between expatriates and host-country nationals in Vietnam: A practice-based study of communicative relations and power dynamics. Journal of International Management, 24(1): 1632.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herman, H. M., Huang, X., & Lam, W. 2013. Why does transformational leadership matter for employee turnover? A multi-foci social exchange perspective. The Leadership Quarterly, 24(5): 763776.Google Scholar
Hippler, T., Haslberger, A., & Brewster, C. 2017. Expatriate adjustment. In McNulty, Y. & Selmer, J. (Eds.), Research handbook of expatriates: 83105. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing.Google Scholar
Holtbrügge, D., & Ambrosius, J. 2015. Mentoring, skill development, and career success of foreign expatriates. Human Resource Development International, 18(3): 278294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hon, A. H., & Lu, L. 2010. The mediating role of trust between expatriate procedural justice and employee outcomes in Chinese hotel industry. International Journal of Hospitality Management, 29(4): 669676.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hussain, T., & Deery, S. 2018. Why do self-initiated expatriates quit their jobs: The role of job embeddedness and shocks in explaining turnover intentions. International Business Review, 27(1): 281288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutchings, K., & Weir, D. 2006. Guanxi and wasta: A comparison. Thunderbird International Business Review, 48(1): 141156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutchings, K., Michailova, S., & Harrison, E. C. 2013. Neither ghettoed nor cosmopolitan. Management International Review, 53(2): 291318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inkson, K., Arthur, M. B., Pringle, J., & Barry, S. 1997. Expatriate assignment versus overseas experience: Contrasting models of international human resource development. Journal of World Business, 32(4): 351368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
InterNations. 2021. Expat insider 2021. [Cited 23 December 2021]. Available from URL: https://cms-internationsgmbh.netdna-ssl.com/sites/default/files/2021-05/InterNations_Expat-Insider-2021_0.pdfGoogle Scholar
James, K., Lovato, C., & Cropanzano, R. 1994. Correlational and known-group comparison validation of a workplace prejudice/discrimination inventory. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 24(17): 15731592.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jannesari, M., & Sullivan, S. E. 2019. Career adaptability and the success of self-initiated expatriates in China. Career Development International, 24(4): 331349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jokinen, T., Brewster, C., & Suutari, V. 2008. Career capital during international work experiences: Contrasting self-initiated expatriate experiences and assigned expatriation. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 19(6): 979998.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kang, H., & Shen, J. 2018. Antecedents and consequences of host-country nationals’ attitudes and behaviors toward expatriates: What we do and do not know. Human Resource Management Review, 28(2): 164175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kawai, N., & Strange, R. 2014. Perceived organizational support and expatriate performance: Understanding a mediated model. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25(17): 24382462.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, H. D., & Tung, R. L. 2013. Opportunities and challenges for expatriates in emerging markets: An exploratory study of Korean expatriates in India. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 24(5): 10291050.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Köllen, T., Koch, A., & Hack, A. 2020. Nationalism at work: Introducing the ‘nationality-based organizational climate inventory’ and assessing its impact on the turnover intention of foreign employees. Management International Review, 60(1): 97122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Konovsky, M. A. 2000. Understanding procedural justice and its impact on business organizations. Journal of Management, 26(3): 489513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kraak, J. M., Altman, Y., & Laguecir, A. 2018. Psychological contract meets cultural theory: A study of self-initiated expatriates. International Studies of Management & Organization, 48(4): 386402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kraimer, M. L., & Wayne, S. J. 2004. An examination of perceived organizational support as a multidimensional construct in the context of an expatriate assignment. Journal of Management, 30(2): 209237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kray, L. J., & Lind, E. A. 2002. The injustices of others: Social reports and the integration of others’ experiences in organizational justice judgments. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 89(1): 906924.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lambe, C. J., Wittmann, C. M., & Spekman, R. E. 2001. Social exchange theory and research on business-to-business relational exchange. Journal of Business-to-Business Marketing, 8(3): 136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavelle, J. J., Rupp, D. E., & Brockner, J. 2007. Taking a multifoci approach to the study of justice, social exchange, and citizenship behavior: The target similarity model. Journal of Management, 33(6): 841866.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, L. Y., Veasna, S., & Wu, W. Y. 2013. The effects of social support and transformational leadership on expatriate adjustment and performance: The moderating roles of socialization experience and cultural intelligence. Career Development International, 18(4): 377415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lind, E. A., Kray, L., & Thompson, L. 1998. The social construction of injustice: Fairness judgments in response to own and others’ unfair treatment by authorities. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 75(1): 122.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, Y., & Ipe, M. 2010. The impact of organizational and leader–member support on expatriate commitment. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 21(7): 10351048.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lo, K. I. H., Wong, I. A., Yam, C. R., & Whitfield, R. 2012. Examining the impacts of community and organization embeddedness on self-initiated expatriates: The moderating role of expatriate-dominated private sector. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 23(20): 42114230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lu, W., Saka-Helmhout, A., & Piekkari, R. 2019. Adaptation of compensation practice in China: The role of sub-national institutions. Management and Organization Review, 15(2): 235267.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahajan, A., & De Silva, S. R. 2012. Unmet role expectations of expatriates, host-country national support, and expatriate adjustment. International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, 12(3): 349360.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahajan, A., & Toh, S. M. 2014. Facilitating expatriate adjustment: The role of advice-seeking from host country nationals. Journal of World Business, 49(4): 476487.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malek, M., Budhwar, P., & Reiche, B. S. 2015. Sources of support and expatriation: A multiple stakeholder perspective of expatriate adjustment and performance in Malaysia. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 26(2): 258276.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maley, J. F., Moeller, M., & Ting, A. F. 2020. Sustainable expatriate compensation in an uncertain environment. Journal of International Management, 26(3): 100776.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meuer, J., Tröster, C., Angstmann, M., Backes-Gellner, U., & Pull, K. 2019. Embeddedness and the repatriation intention of assigned and self-initiated expatriates. European Management Journal, 37(6): 784793.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meyer, J. P. 1997. Organizational commitment. In Cooper, C. L. & Robertson, I. T. (Eds.), International review of industrial and psychology, vol. 12: 175227. New York, NY: Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Moeller, M., & Harvey, M. 2011. The influence of political skill on the acceptance of foreign nationals at the home country organization: An examination of cultural stigmatization. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 22(12): 25932608.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molm, L. D. 2000. Theories of social exchange and exchange networks. In Ritzer, G. & Smart, B. (Eds.), Handbook of social theory: 260272. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Molm, L. D. 2003. Theoretical comparisons of forms of exchange. Sociological Theory, 21(1): 117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Navas, M., García, M. C., Sánchez, J., Rojas, A. J., Pumares, P., & Fernández, J. S. 2005. Relative Acculturation Extended Model (RAEM): New contributions with regard to the study of acculturation. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 29(1): 2137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peltokorpi, V., & Froese, F. 2014. Expatriate personality and cultural fit: The moderating role of host country context on job satisfaction. International Business Review, 23(1): 293302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perera, H. K., Chew, Y. T., & Nielsen, I. 2017. A psychological contract perspective of expatriate failure. Human Resource Management, 56(3): 479499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perera, H. K., Chew, Y. T., & Nielsen, I. 2018. A qualitative study of expatriates’ perceptions of and process of responses to psychological contract breach. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 29(8): 14541484.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pinnington, A. H., Alshamsi, A., Özbilgin, M., Tatli, A., & Vassilopoulou, J. 2018. Macro talent management in the United Arab Emirates: Developing more informative government perspectives. In Vaiman, V., Sparrow, P., Schuler, R., & Collings, D. G. (Eds.), Macro talent management in emerging and emergent markets: A global perspective: 147170. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rees, C. J., Mamman, A., & Braik, A. B. 2007. Emiratization as a strategic HRM change initiative: Case study evidence from a UAE petroleum company. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 18(1): 3353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richardson, J., & McKenna, S. 2002. Leaving and experiencing: Why academics expatriate and how they experience expatriation. Career Development International, 7(2): 6778.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riketta, M. 2005. Organizational identification: A meta-analysis. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 66(2): 358384.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, S. 2008. Dysfunctional workplace behavior. In Baling, J. & Cooper, C. (Eds.), The SAGE handbook of organizational behavior, vol. 1: 141159. Los Angeles, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Rodriguez, J. K., & Scurry, T. 2014. Career capital development of self-initiated expatriates in Qatar: Cosmopolitan globetrotters, experts and outsiders. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25(7): 10461067.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rothstein, B., & Stolle, D. 2008. The state and social capital: An institutional theory of generalized trust. Comparative Politics, 40(4): 441459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saks, A. M. 2006. Antecedents and consequences of employee engagement. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 21(7): 600617.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salin, D., & Notelaers, G. 2020. The effects of workplace bullying on witnesses: Violation of the psychological contract as an explanatory mechanism? The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 31(18): 23192339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanchez, J. I., & Brock, P. 1996. Outcomes of perceived discrimination among Hispanic employees: Is diversity management a luxury or a necessity? Academy of Management Journal, 39(3): 704719.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Selmer, J., & Lauring, J. 2011. Acquired demographics and reasons to relocate among self-initiated expatriates. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 22(10): 20552070.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaffer, M. A., & Harrison, D. A. 1998. Expatriates’ psychological withdrawal from international assignments: Work, nonwork, and family influences. Personnel Psychology, 51(1): 87118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shantz, A., Wang, J., & Malik, A. 2018. Disability status, individual variable pay, and pay satisfaction: Does relational and institutional trust make a difference? Human Resource Management, 57(1): 365380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sidani, Y. M., & Thornberry, J. 2013. Nepotism in the Arab world: An institutional theory perspective. Business Ethics Quarterly, 23(1): 6996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singh, S. K., Edward Pereira, V., Mellahi, K., & Collings, D. G. 2021. Host country nationals characteristics and willingness to help self-initiated expatriates in the UAE. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 32(8): 17071730.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sparrow, P., Vaiman, V., Schuler, R., & Collings, D. G. 2018. Introduction: Macro talent management in emerging and emergent markets: Foundations for a developing field. In Vaiman, V., Sparrow, P., Schuler, R., & Collings, D. G. (Eds.), Macro talent management in emerging and emergent markets: A global perspective: 121. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Stinglhamber, F., Caesens, G., Chalmagne, B., Demoulin, S., & Maurage, P. 2021. Leader–member exchange and organizational dehumanization: The role of supervisor's organizational embodiment. European Management Journal, 39(6): 745754.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoermer, S., Davies, S., & Froese, F. J. 2021. The influence of expatriate cultural intelligence on organizational embeddedness and knowledge sharing: The moderating effects of host country context. Journal of International Business Studies, 52(3): 432453.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Syed, J., Hazboun, N. G., & Murray, P. A. 2014. What locals want: Jordanian employees’ views on expatriate managers. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25(2): 212233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Takeuchi, R. 2010. A critical review of expatriate adjustment research through a multiple stakeholder view: Progress, emerging trends, and prospects. Journal of Management, 36(4): 10401064.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Takeuchi, R., Yun, S., & Tesluk, P. E. 2002. An examination of crossover and spillover effects of spousal and expatriate cross-cultural adjustment on expatriate outcomes. Journal of Applied Psychology, 87(4): 655666.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tang, A. D., Chang, M. L., & Cheng, C. F. 2017. Enhancing knowledge sharing from self-initiated expatriates in Vietnam: The role of internal marketing and work-role adjustment in an emerging economy. Asia Pacific Business Review, 23(5): 677696.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tharenou, P., & Caulfield, N. 2010. Will I stay or will I go? Explaining repatriation by self-initiated expatriates. Academy of Management Journal, 53(5): 10091028.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toh, S. M., & Denisi, A. S. 2007. Host country nationals as socializing agents: A social identity approach. Journal of Organizational Behaviour, 28(3): 281301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ulziisukh, S., & Wei, Z. 2022. Behind the political connections under emerging democracies. Management and Organization Review, 18(4): 686716.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Walle, S., & Bouckaert, G. 2003. Public service performance and trust in government: The problem of causality. International Journal of Public Administration, 26(8–9): 891913.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Ryzin, G. G. 2007. Pieces of a puzzle: Linking government performance, citizen satisfaction, and trust. Public Performance & Management Review, 30(4): 521535.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vigoda-Gadot, E., & Yuval, F. 2003. Managerial quality, administrative performance and trust in governance revisited: A follow-up study of causality. International Journal of Public Sector Management, 16(7): 502522.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, D., Freeman, S., & Zhu, C. J. 2013. Personality traits and cross-cultural competence of Chinese expatriate managers: A socio-analytic and institutional perspective. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 24(20): 38123830.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wasti, S. A., Tan, H. H., & Erdil, S. E. 2011. Antecedents of trust across foci: A comparative study of Turkey and China. Management and Organization Review, 7(2): 279302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waxin, M.-F., Kumra, S., & Zhao, F. 2020. Workforce localization in the Arab Gulf Countries: How do organizations socialize the members of a powerful minority? Sustainability, 12(14): 5847.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, L. J., & McGonagle, A. K. 2016. Four research designs and a comprehensive analysis strategy for investigating common method variance with self-report measures using latent variables. Journal of Business and Psychology, 31(3): 339359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, L. J., Cote, J. A., & Buckley, M. R. 1989. Lack of method variance in self-reported affect and perceptions at work: Reality or artifact? Journal of Applied Psychology, 74(3): 462468.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, P. C., & Ang, S. H. 2011. The impact of expatriate supporting practices and cultural intelligence on cross-cultural adjustment and performance of expatriates in Singapore. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 22(13): 26832702.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yunlu, D. G., Ren, H., Fodchuk, K. M., & Shaffer, M. 2018. Home away from home: Community embeddedness and expatriate retention cognitions. Journal of Global Mobility, 6(2): 194208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, K. Y., & Rienties, B. 2017. Unpacking differences in psychological contracts of organizational and self-initiated expatriates. Journal of Global Mobility, 5(1): 93108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, Y., George, J. M., & Chan, T.-S. 2006. The paradox of dueling identities: The case of local senior executives in MNC subsidiaries. Journal of Management, 32(3): 400425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zucker, L. G. 1986. Production of trust: Institutional sources of economic structure, 1840–1920. Research in Organizational Behavior, 8: 53111.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Descriptive statistics, measures validity, and correlations

Figure 1

Table 2. Confirmatory analyses and common method variance examination

Figure 2

Figure 1. Theoretical framework and summary results Notes: Direct effects; ° total effects; p-values in brackets.

Figure 3

Table 3. Estimations and mediation analysis