Perceived Employability of Highly Skilled Migrant Women in STEM: Insights from Labor Market Intermediaries’ Professionals

While global economies are in a tremendous need for talented workers that could fill vacancies in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields, available evidence shows that highly skilled migrants with a background in these fields are not protected from brain waste and deskilling...

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Main Authors: Aurora Ricci, Francesca Crivellaro, Daniela Bolzani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Administrative Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3387/11/1/7
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spelling doaj-7ffe407b138e4bf08daa5a167effcb822021-01-20T00:02:27ZengMDPI AGAdministrative Sciences2076-33872021-01-01117710.3390/admsci11010007Perceived Employability of Highly Skilled Migrant Women in STEM: Insights from Labor Market Intermediaries’ ProfessionalsAurora Ricci0Francesca Crivellaro1Daniela Bolzani2Department of Education Studies “Giovanni Maria Bertin”, University of Bologna, 40126 Bologna, ItalyDepartment of Education Studies “Giovanni Maria Bertin”, University of Bologna, 40126 Bologna, ItalyDepartment of Management, University of Bologna, 40126 Bologna, ItalyWhile global economies are in a tremendous need for talented workers that could fill vacancies in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields, available evidence shows that highly skilled migrants with a background in these fields are not protected from brain waste and deskilling. In this paper, we add to the previous literature on the employability of highly skilled migrant women from the specific—and under-investigated—perspective of labor market intermediaries. We specifically investigate what the barriers and resources are for employability of highly skilled migrant women in STEM, as perceived by labor market intermediaries’ professionals; and what the training needs are that labor market intermediaries’ professionals perceive to effectively work with this target group. We use unique explorative survey data collected in 2018 in five countries (Greece, Hungary, Italy, Sweden, United Kingdom) from professionals working in diverse labor market intermediary organizations. We find that these professionals perceive the employability of migrant women in STEM as rather low, and strongly determined by migrant women’s psychological capital. Professionals in Southern Europe perceive structural barriers as more important than those in other countries. Professionals display training needs related to ad-hoc mentoring and networking competences for this specific target group. We discuss theoretical and practical implications.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3387/11/1/7highly skilled migrationhighly skilled migrantsinternational migrantslabor market intermediarieswomengender and Europe
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aurora Ricci
Francesca Crivellaro
Daniela Bolzani
spellingShingle Aurora Ricci
Francesca Crivellaro
Daniela Bolzani
Perceived Employability of Highly Skilled Migrant Women in STEM: Insights from Labor Market Intermediaries’ Professionals
Administrative Sciences
highly skilled migration
highly skilled migrants
international migrants
labor market intermediaries
women
gender and Europe
author_facet Aurora Ricci
Francesca Crivellaro
Daniela Bolzani
author_sort Aurora Ricci
title Perceived Employability of Highly Skilled Migrant Women in STEM: Insights from Labor Market Intermediaries’ Professionals
title_short Perceived Employability of Highly Skilled Migrant Women in STEM: Insights from Labor Market Intermediaries’ Professionals
title_full Perceived Employability of Highly Skilled Migrant Women in STEM: Insights from Labor Market Intermediaries’ Professionals
title_fullStr Perceived Employability of Highly Skilled Migrant Women in STEM: Insights from Labor Market Intermediaries’ Professionals
title_full_unstemmed Perceived Employability of Highly Skilled Migrant Women in STEM: Insights from Labor Market Intermediaries’ Professionals
title_sort perceived employability of highly skilled migrant women in stem: insights from labor market intermediaries’ professionals
publisher MDPI AG
series Administrative Sciences
issn 2076-3387
publishDate 2021-01-01
description While global economies are in a tremendous need for talented workers that could fill vacancies in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields, available evidence shows that highly skilled migrants with a background in these fields are not protected from brain waste and deskilling. In this paper, we add to the previous literature on the employability of highly skilled migrant women from the specific—and under-investigated—perspective of labor market intermediaries. We specifically investigate what the barriers and resources are for employability of highly skilled migrant women in STEM, as perceived by labor market intermediaries’ professionals; and what the training needs are that labor market intermediaries’ professionals perceive to effectively work with this target group. We use unique explorative survey data collected in 2018 in five countries (Greece, Hungary, Italy, Sweden, United Kingdom) from professionals working in diverse labor market intermediary organizations. We find that these professionals perceive the employability of migrant women in STEM as rather low, and strongly determined by migrant women’s psychological capital. Professionals in Southern Europe perceive structural barriers as more important than those in other countries. Professionals display training needs related to ad-hoc mentoring and networking competences for this specific target group. We discuss theoretical and practical implications.
topic highly skilled migration
highly skilled migrants
international migrants
labor market intermediaries
women
gender and Europe
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3387/11/1/7
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