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Wikipedia

Expatriate

An expatriate (often shortened to expat) is a person who resides outside their native country.[1] In common usage, the term often refers to educated professionals, skilled workers, or artists taking positions outside their home country, either independently or sent abroad by their employers.[2] However, the term 'expatriate' is also used for retirees and others who have chosen to live outside their native country. Historically, it has also referred to exiles.[3]

Expatriate French voters queue in Lausanne, Switzerland for the first round of the presidential election of 2007

Etymology

The word expatriate comes from the Latin terms ex ("out of") and patria ("native country, fatherland").

Semantics

Dictionary definitions for the current meaning of the word include:

Expatriate:
  • 'A person who lives outside their native country' (Oxford),[3] or
  • 'living in a foreign land' (Webster's).[4]

These definitions contrast with those of other words with a similar meaning, such as:

Migrant:
  • 'A person who moves from one place to another in order to find work or better living conditions' (Oxford),[5] or
  • 'one that migrates: such as a: a person who moves regularly in order to find work especially in harvesting crops' (Webster's);[6]
or
Immigrant
  • 'A person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country' (Oxford),[7] or
  • 'one that immigrates: such as a: a person who comes to a country to take up permanent residence (Webster's).[8]

The varying use of these terms for different groups of foreigners can be seen as implying nuances about wealth, intended length of stay, perceived motives for moving, nationality, and even race. This has caused controversy, with some commentators asserting that the traditional use of the word "expat" has had racist connotations.[9][10]

An older usage of the word expatriate referred to an exile.[3] Alternatively, when used as a verbal noun, expatriation can mean the act of someone renouncing allegiance to their native country, as in the preamble to the United States Expatriation Act of 1868 which states: 'the right of expatriation is a natural and inherent right of all people, indispensable to the enjoyment of the rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness'.[11]

Some neologisms have been coined, including:

  • dispatriate, an expatriate who intentionally distances themselves from their nation of origin;[12]
  • flexpatriate, an employee who often travels internationally for business (see "Business expatriates" below);[13]
  • inpatriate, an employee sent from a foreign subsidiary to work in the country where a company has its headquarters;[14]
  • rex-pat, a repeat expatriate, often someone who has chosen to return to a foreign country after completing a work assignment;[15]
  • sexpat, an expatriate with a goal for a short term or long term sexual relationships (expatriate + sex tourist).[16][17][18]

The term "expatriate" is sometimes misspelled as "ex-patriot", which author Anu Garg has characterised as an example of an eggcorn.[19]

History

Types of expat community

In the 19th century, travel became easier by way of steamship or train. People could more readily choose to live for several years in a foreign country, or be sent there by employers. The table below aims to show significant examples of expatriate communities which have developed since that time:

Group Period Country of origin Destination Host country Notes
Australians and New Zealanders in London 1960s-now Australia/New Zealand London United Kingdom
Beat Generation 1950s United States Tangier Morocco
Beat Generation 1960s United States Paris France See Beat Hotel.
British retirees 1970s–now United Kingdom Costa del Sol Spain Arguably immigrants if permanent.
British retirees current United Kingdom Dordogne France Arguably immigrants if permanent.
British Raj 1721–1949 United Kingdom India Often referred to as "Anglo-Indians".
Celebrities and artists 1800s–now various Lake Geneva Switzerland
Film-makers 1910s–now Europe Los Angeles United States "Hollywood"
Jet set 1950s–1970s various various
Lost Generation 1920s–30s United States Paris France See A Moveable Feast.
Modernist artists & writers 1870s–1930s various French Riviera France
Oligarchs 1990s–current Russia London[20] United Kingdom
Salarymen current Japan various See Japanese diaspora
Shanghai French Concession 1849–1943 France Shanghai China
Shanghai International Settlement 1863–1945 United Kingdom Shanghai China Preceded by British Concession
Shanghai International Settlement 1863–1945 United States Shanghai China Preceded by American Concession
Tax exiles 1860s(?)–now various Monte Carlo Monaco
Third culture kids current various various Includes 'military brats' and 'diplobrats'.

During the 1930s, Nazi Germany revoked the citizenship of many opponents, such as Albert Einstein, Oskar Maria Graf, Willy Brandt and Thomas Mann, often expatriating entire families.[21][22]

Students who study in another country may or may not be referred to as expatriates.[23][24]

Worldwide distribution of expats

In 2002, terrorist attacks against Westerners at times curtailed the party lifestyle of some expatriate communities, especially in the Middle East.[25]

The number of expatriates in the world is difficult to determine, since there is no governmental census.[26] Market research companyF inaccord estimated the number to be 66.2 million in 2017.[27]

In 2013, the United Nations estimated that 232 million people, or 3.2% of the world population, lived outside their home country.[citation needed]

As of 2019, according to the United Nations, the number of international migrants globally reached an estimated 272 million, or 3.5% of the world population.[28]

Business expatriates

 
Long among the complexities of living in foreign countries has been the management of finances, including the payment of taxes; here, a 32-page IRS publication from 1965 for Americans living abroad

Some multinational corporations send employees to foreign countries to work in branch offices or subsidiaries. Expatriate employees allow a parent company to more closely control its foreign subsidiaries. They can also improve global coordination.[29]

A 2007 study found the key drivers for expatriates to pursue international careers were: breadth of responsibilities, nature of the international environment (risk and challenge), high levels of autonomy of international posts, and cultural differences (rethinking old ways).[30]

However, expatriate professionals and independent expatriate hires are often more expensive than local employees. Expatriate salaries are usually augmented with allowances to compensate for a higher cost of living or hardships associated with a foreign posting. Other expenses may need to be paid, such as health care, housing, or fees at an international school. There is also the cost of moving a family and their belongings. Another problem can be government restrictions in the foreign country.[31][32]

Spouses may have trouble adjusting due to culture shock, loss of their usual social network, interruptions to their own career, and helping children cope with a new school. These are chief reasons given for foreign assignments ending early.[33] However, a spouse can also act as a source of support for an expatriate professional.[34] Families with children help to bridge the language and culture aspect of the host and home country, while the spouse plays a critical role in balancing the families integration into the culture. Some corporations have begun to include spouses earlier when making decisions about a foreign posting, and offer coaching or adjustment training before a family departs.[35] Research suggests that tailoring pre-departure cross-cultural training and its specific relevance positively influence the fulfilment of expectations in expatriates' adjustment.[36] According to the 2012 Global Relocation Trends Survey Report, 88 per cent of spouses resist a proposed move. The most common reasons for refusing an assignment are family concerns and the spouse's career.[37][38]

Expatriate failure is a term which has been coined for an employee returning prematurely to their home country, or resigning. About 7% of expatriates return early, but this figure does not include those who perform poorly while on assignment or resign entirely from a company.[39] When asked the cost of a premature expatriate's return, a survey of 57 multinational companies reported an average cost of about US$225,000.[40]

Reasons and motivations for expatriation

People move abroad for many different reasons.[41] The realisation of what makes people move is the first step in the expatriation process. People could be ‘pushed’ away as a reaction to specific socio-economic or political conditions in the home country, or ‘pulled’ towards a destination country because of better work opportunities/conditions. The ‘pull’ can also include personal preferences, such as climate, a better quality of life, or the fact that family/friends are living there.[42][43]

For some people, moving abroad is a conscious, thoroughly planned decision, while for others it could be a ‘spur of the moment’, spontaneous decision. This decision, of course, is influenced by the individual’s geographic, socioeconomic and political environment; as well as their personal circumstances. The motivation for moving (or staying) abroad also gets adjusted with the different life changes the person experiences – for example, if they get married, have children, etc. Also, different personalities (or personality types) have diverse reactions to the challenges of adjusting to a host-country culture; and these reactions affect their motivations to continue (or not) living abroad.[44][45][46]

In this era of international competition, it is important for companies, as well as for countries, to understand what is that motivates people to move to another country to work. Understanding expatriates’ motivations for international mobility allows organisations to tailor work packages to match expatriates’ expectations in order to attract and/or retain skilled workers from abroad.  

Recent trends

Trends in recent years among business expatriates have included:

  • Reluctance by employees to accept foreign assignments, due to spouses also having a career.[citation needed]
  • Reluctance by multinational corporations to sponsor overseas assignments, due to increased sensitivity both to costs and to local cultures.[citation needed] It is common for an expat to cost at least three times more than a comparable local employee.[47]
  • Short-term assignments becoming more common.[48][37] These are assignments of several months to a year which rarely require the expatriate family to move. They can include specific projects, technology transfer, or problem-solving tasks.[37] In 2008, nearly two-thirds of international assignments consisted of long-term assignments (greater than one year, typically three years). In 2014, that number fell to just over half.[49]
  • Self-initiated expatriation, where individuals themselves arrange a contract to work overseas, rather than being sent by a parent company to a subsidiary.[50][51][52][53][54] An 'SIE' typically does not require as big a compensation package as does a traditional business expatriate. Also, spouses of SIEs are less reluctant to interrupt their own careers, at a time when dual-career issues are arguably shrinking the pool of willing expatriates.[55]
  • Local companies in emerging markets hiring Western managers directly.[56][57][58][59]
  • Commuter assignments which involve employees living in one country but travelling to another for work. This usually occurs on a weekly or biweekly rotation, with weekends spent at home.[37]
  • Flexpatriates, international business travellers who take a plethora of short trips to locations around the globe for negotiations, meetings, training and conferences. These assignments are usually of several weeks duration each. Their irregular nature can cause stress within a family.[37]
  • Consulting firm Mercer reported in 2017 that women made up only 14 per cent of the expatriate workforce globally.[60]

The Munich-based paid expatriate networking platform InterNations conducts a survey of expat opinions and trends on regular basis.[61]

Academic research

There has been an increase in scholarly research into the field in recent years. For instance, Emerald Group Publishing in 2013 launched The Journal of Global Mobility: The home of expatriate management research.[62]

S.K Canhilal and R.G. Shemueli suggest that successful expatriation is driven by a combination of individual, organizational, and context-related factors.[63] Of these factors, the most significant have been outlined as: cross-cultural competences, spousal support, motivational questions, time of assignment, emotional competences, previous international experience, language fluency, social relational skills, cultural differences, and organizational recruitment and selection process.[64]

Literary and screen portrayals

Fiction

Expatriate milieus have been the setting of many novels and short stories, often written by authors who spent years living abroad. The following is a list of notable works and authors, by approximate date of publication.

19th century: American author Henry James moved to Europe as a young man and many of his novels, such as The Portrait of a Lady (1881), The Ambassadors (1903), and The Wings of the Dove (1902), dealt with relationships between the New World and the Old. From the 1890s to 1920s, Polish-born Joseph Conrad wrote a string of English-language novels drawing on his seagoing experiences in farflung colonies, including Heart of Darkness (1899), Lord Jim (1900) and Nostromo (1904).

1900s/1910s: German-American writer Herman George Scheffauer was active from 1900 to 1925. English writer W. Somerset Maugham, a former spy, set many short stories and novels overseas, such as The Moon and Sixpence (1919) in which an English stockbroker flees to Tahiti to become an artist, and The Razor's Edge (1944) in which a traumatised American pilot seeks meaning in France and India. Ford Madox Ford used spa towns in Europe as the setting for his novel The Good Soldier (1915) about an American couple, a British couple, and their infidelities.

1920s: A Passage to India (1924), one of the best-known books by E.M. Forster, is set against the backdrop of the independence movement in India. Ernest Hemingway portrayed American men in peril abroad, beginning with his debut novel, The Sun Also Rises (1926).

1930s: Graham Greene was a keen traveller and another former spy, and from the 1930s to 1980s many of his novels and short stories dealt with Englishmen struggling to cope in exotic foreign places. Tender is the Night (1934), the last complete novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald, was about a glamorous American couple unravelling in the South of France. George Orwell drew heavily on his own experiences as a colonial policeman for his novel Burmese Days (1934). Evelyn Waugh satirised foreign correspondents in Scoop (1938).

1940s: From the mid-1940s to the 1990s, American-born Paul Bowles set many short stories and novels in his adopted home of Morocco, including The Sheltering Sky (1949).[65] Malcolm Lowry in Under the Volcano (1947) told the tale of an alcoholic British consul in Mexico on the Day of the Dead.[66]

1950s: From the 1950s to the 1990s, American author Patricia Highsmith set many of her psychological thrillers abroad, including The Talented Mr. Ripley (1955). James Baldwin's novel Giovanni's Room (1956) was about an American man having an affair in Paris with an Italian bartender. Anthony Burgess worked as a teacher in Malaya and made it the setting of The Malayan Trilogy (1956-1959). The Alexandria Quartet (1957-1960) was the best-known work of Lawrence Durrell, who was born in India to British parents and lived overseas for most of his life.

1960s: English writer Paul Scott is best known for The Raj Quartet (1965-1975) dealing with the final years of the British Empire in India. John le Carré made use of overseas settings for The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963) and many of his subsequent novels about British spies.

1970s: In The Year of Living Dangerously (1978), Christopher Koch portrayed the lead-up to a 1965 coup in Indonesia through the eyes of an Australian journalist and a British diplomat. A Cry in the Jungle Bar (1979) by Robert Drewe portrayed an Australian out of his depth while working for the UN in South-East Asia.

1990s: In both Cocaine Nights (1996) and Super-Cannes (2000), J. G. Ballard's English protagonists uncover dark secrets in luxurious gated communities in the South of France.

2000s: Platform (2001) was French author Michel Houellebecq's novel of European sex tourists in Thailand. Prague (2002) was a debut novel by Arthur Phillips which dealt with Americans and Canadians in Hungary towards the end of the Cold War. Shantaram (2003) was a bestselling novel by Gregory David Roberts about an Australian criminal who flees to India.

2010s: American novelist Chris Pavone has set several thrillers overseas since his debut The Expats (2012). Janice Y. K. Lee in The Expatriates (2016) dealt with Americans in Hong Kong. Tom Rachman in his debut novel The Imperfectionists (2010) wrote of journalists working for an English-language newspaper in Rome.[67]

Memoirs

Memoirs of expatriate life can be considered a form of travel literature with an extended stay in the host country. Some of the more notable examples are listed here in order of their publication date, and recount experiences of roughly the same decade unless noted otherwise.

Medieval: In The Travels of Marco Polo (c.1300), Rustichello da Pisa recounted the tales of Italian merchant Marco Polo about journeying the Silk Road to China.

1930s-1960s: In the first half of Down and Out in Paris and London (1933), George Orwell described a life of low-paid squalor while working in the kitchens of Parisian restaurants. In The America That I Have Seen (1949), Egyptian Islamist Sayyid Qutb denounced the United States after studying there. In My Family and Other Animals (1956) and its sequels, Gerald Durrell described growing up as the budding naturalist in an eccentric English family on the Greek island of Corfu during the late 1930s. In As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning (1969), Laurie Lee told of busking and tramping in his youth across 1930s Spain.

1970s-1990s: In Letters from Hollywood (1986), Michael Moorcock corresponded with a friend about the life of an English writer in Los Angeles. In A Year in Provence (1989), Peter Mayle and his English family adapt to life in Southern France while renovating an old farmhouse. In Notes from a Small Island (1995), American writer Bill Bryson described a farewell tour of Britain.

2000s: In A Year in the Merde (2004) English bachelor Stephen Clarke recounted comic escapades while working in Paris. In Eat, Pray, Love (2006), divorced American Elizabeth Gilbert searched for meaning in Italy, India and Indonesia. In the early chapters of Miracles of Life (2008), J. G. Ballard told of his childhood and early adolescence in Shanghai during the 1930s and 1940s.

Film

Films about expatriates often deal with issues of culture shock. They include dramas, comedies, thrillers, action/adventure films and romances. Examples, grouped by host country, include:

Television

Reality television has dealt with overseas real estate (House Hunters International and A Place in the Sun), wealthy Russians in London (Meet the Russians), British expat couples (No Going Back) and mismanaged restaurants (Ramsay's Costa del Nightmares).

The final decades of the British Raj have been portrayed in dramas (The Jewel in the Crown and Indian Summers). Diplomats on a foreign posting have been the basis for drama (Embassy), documentary (The Embassy) and comedy (Ambassadors). British writers in Hollywood have been the subject of comedy (Episodes). Other settings include British doctors in contemporary India (The Good Karma Hospital) and a series of British detectives posted to an idyllic Caribbean island (Death in Paradise).

See also

References

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Expat redirects here For the XML parser see Expat software For the free Expat License software license see MIT License For other uses see Expatriate disambiguation An expatriate often shortened to expat is a person who resides outside their native country 1 In common usage the term often refers to educated professionals skilled workers or artists taking positions outside their home country either independently or sent abroad by their employers 2 However the term expatriate is also used for retirees and others who have chosen to live outside their native country Historically it has also referred to exiles 3 Expatriate French voters queue in Lausanne Switzerland for the first round of the presidential election of 2007 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Semantics 3 History 3 1 Types of expat community 3 2 Worldwide distribution of expats 4 Business expatriates 4 1 Reasons and motivations for expatriation 4 2 Recent trends 5 Academic research 6 Literary and screen portrayals 6 1 Fiction 6 2 Memoirs 6 3 Film 6 4 Television 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEtymology EditThe word expatriate comes from the Latin terms ex out of and patria native country fatherland Semantics EditDictionary definitions for the current meaning of the word include Expatriate A person who lives outside their native country Oxford 3 or living in a foreign land Webster s 4 These definitions contrast with those of other words with a similar meaning such as Migrant A person who moves from one place to another in order to find work or better living conditions Oxford 5 or one that migrates such as a a person who moves regularly in order to find work especially in harvesting crops Webster s 6 or dd dd dd dd dd Immigrant A person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country Oxford 7 or one that immigrates such as a a person who comes to a country to take up permanent residence Webster s 8 The varying use of these terms for different groups of foreigners can be seen as implying nuances about wealth intended length of stay perceived motives for moving nationality and even race This has caused controversy with some commentators asserting that the traditional use of the word expat has had racist connotations 9 10 An older usage of the word expatriate referred to an exile 3 Alternatively when used as a verbal noun expatriation can mean the act of someone renouncing allegiance to their native country as in the preamble to the United States Expatriation Act of 1868 which states the right of expatriation is a natural and inherent right of all people indispensable to the enjoyment of the rights of life liberty and the pursuit of happiness 11 Some neologisms have been coined including dispatriate an expatriate who intentionally distances themselves from their nation of origin 12 flexpatriate an employee who often travels internationally for business see Business expatriates below 13 inpatriate an employee sent from a foreign subsidiary to work in the country where a company has its headquarters 14 rex pat a repeat expatriate often someone who has chosen to return to a foreign country after completing a work assignment 15 sexpat an expatriate with a goal for a short term or long term sexual relationships expatriate sex tourist 16 17 18 The term expatriate is sometimes misspelled as ex patriot which author Anu Garg has characterised as an example of an eggcorn 19 History EditTypes of expat community Edit In the 19th century travel became easier by way of steamship or train People could more readily choose to live for several years in a foreign country or be sent there by employers The table below aims to show significant examples of expatriate communities which have developed since that time This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items February 2017 Group Period Country of origin Destination Host country NotesAustralians and New Zealanders in London 1960s now Australia New Zealand London United KingdomBeat Generation 1950s United States Tangier MoroccoBeat Generation 1960s United States Paris France See Beat Hotel British retirees 1970s now United Kingdom Costa del Sol Spain Arguably immigrants if permanent British retirees current United Kingdom Dordogne France Arguably immigrants if permanent British Raj 1721 1949 United Kingdom India Often referred to as Anglo Indians Celebrities and artists 1800s now various Lake Geneva SwitzerlandFilm makers 1910s now Europe Los Angeles United States Hollywood Jet set 1950s 1970s various variousLost Generation 1920s 30s United States Paris France See A Moveable Feast Modernist artists amp writers 1870s 1930s various French Riviera FranceOligarchs 1990s current Russia London 20 United KingdomSalarymen current Japan various See Japanese diasporaShanghai French Concession 1849 1943 France Shanghai ChinaShanghai International Settlement 1863 1945 United Kingdom Shanghai China Preceded by British ConcessionShanghai International Settlement 1863 1945 United States Shanghai China Preceded by American ConcessionTax exiles 1860s now various Monte Carlo MonacoThird culture kids current various various Includes military brats and diplobrats During the 1930s Nazi Germany revoked the citizenship of many opponents such as Albert Einstein Oskar Maria Graf Willy Brandt and Thomas Mann often expatriating entire families 21 22 Students who study in another country may or may not be referred to as expatriates 23 24 Worldwide distribution of expats Edit Further information List of sovereign states and dependent territories by immigrant population In 2002 terrorist attacks against Westerners at times curtailed the party lifestyle of some expatriate communities especially in the Middle East 25 The number of expatriates in the world is difficult to determine since there is no governmental census 26 Market research companyF inaccord estimated the number to be 66 2 million in 2017 27 In 2013 the United Nations estimated that 232 million people or 3 2 of the world population lived outside their home country citation needed As of 2019 according to the United Nations the number of international migrants globally reached an estimated 272 million or 3 5 of the world population 28 Business expatriates Edit Long among the complexities of living in foreign countries has been the management of finances including the payment of taxes here a 32 page IRS publication from 1965 for Americans living abroad Some multinational corporations send employees to foreign countries to work in branch offices or subsidiaries Expatriate employees allow a parent company to more closely control its foreign subsidiaries They can also improve global coordination 29 A 2007 study found the key drivers for expatriates to pursue international careers were breadth of responsibilities nature of the international environment risk and challenge high levels of autonomy of international posts and cultural differences rethinking old ways 30 However expatriate professionals and independent expatriate hires are often more expensive than local employees Expatriate salaries are usually augmented with allowances to compensate for a higher cost of living or hardships associated with a foreign posting Other expenses may need to be paid such as health care housing or fees at an international school There is also the cost of moving a family and their belongings Another problem can be government restrictions in the foreign country 31 32 Spouses may have trouble adjusting due to culture shock loss of their usual social network interruptions to their own career and helping children cope with a new school These are chief reasons given for foreign assignments ending early 33 However a spouse can also act as a source of support for an expatriate professional 34 Families with children help to bridge the language and culture aspect of the host and home country while the spouse plays a critical role in balancing the families integration into the culture Some corporations have begun to include spouses earlier when making decisions about a foreign posting and offer coaching or adjustment training before a family departs 35 Research suggests that tailoring pre departure cross cultural training and its specific relevance positively influence the fulfilment of expectations in expatriates adjustment 36 According to the 2012 Global Relocation Trends Survey Report 88 per cent of spouses resist a proposed move The most common reasons for refusing an assignment are family concerns and the spouse s career 37 38 Expatriate failure is a term which has been coined for an employee returning prematurely to their home country or resigning About 7 of expatriates return early but this figure does not include those who perform poorly while on assignment or resign entirely from a company 39 When asked the cost of a premature expatriate s return a survey of 57 multinational companies reported an average cost of about US 225 000 40 Reasons and motivations for expatriation Edit People move abroad for many different reasons 41 The realisation of what makes people move is the first step in the expatriation process People could be pushed away as a reaction to specific socio economic or political conditions in the home country or pulled towards a destination country because of better work opportunities conditions The pull can also include personal preferences such as climate a better quality of life or the fact that family friends are living there 42 43 For some people moving abroad is a conscious thoroughly planned decision while for others it could be a spur of the moment spontaneous decision This decision of course is influenced by the individual s geographic socioeconomic and political environment as well as their personal circumstances The motivation for moving or staying abroad also gets adjusted with the different life changes the person experiences for example if they get married have children etc Also different personalities or personality types have diverse reactions to the challenges of adjusting to a host country culture and these reactions affect their motivations to continue or not living abroad 44 45 46 In this era of international competition it is important for companies as well as for countries to understand what is that motivates people to move to another country to work Understanding expatriates motivations for international mobility allows organisations to tailor work packages to match expatriates expectations in order to attract and or retain skilled workers from abroad Recent trends Edit Trends in recent years among business expatriates have included Reluctance by employees to accept foreign assignments due to spouses also having a career citation needed Reluctance by multinational corporations to sponsor overseas assignments due to increased sensitivity both to costs and to local cultures citation needed It is common for an expat to cost at least three times more than a comparable local employee 47 Short term assignments becoming more common 48 37 These are assignments of several months to a year which rarely require the expatriate family to move They can include specific projects technology transfer or problem solving tasks 37 In 2008 nearly two thirds of international assignments consisted of long term assignments greater than one year typically three years In 2014 that number fell to just over half 49 Self initiated expatriation where individuals themselves arrange a contract to work overseas rather than being sent by a parent company to a subsidiary 50 51 52 53 54 An SIE typically does not require as big a compensation package as does a traditional business expatriate Also spouses of SIEs are less reluctant to interrupt their own careers at a time when dual career issues are arguably shrinking the pool of willing expatriates 55 Local companies in emerging markets hiring Western managers directly 56 57 58 59 Commuter assignments which involve employees living in one country but travelling to another for work This usually occurs on a weekly or biweekly rotation with weekends spent at home 37 Flexpatriates international business travellers who take a plethora of short trips to locations around the globe for negotiations meetings training and conferences These assignments are usually of several weeks duration each Their irregular nature can cause stress within a family 37 Consulting firm Mercer reported in 2017 that women made up only 14 per cent of the expatriate workforce globally 60 The Munich based paid expatriate networking platform InterNations conducts a survey of expat opinions and trends on regular basis 61 Academic research EditThere has been an increase in scholarly research into the field in recent years For instance Emerald Group Publishing in 2013 launched The Journal of Global Mobility The home of expatriate management research 62 S K Canhilal and R G Shemueli suggest that successful expatriation is driven by a combination of individual organizational and context related factors 63 Of these factors the most significant have been outlined as cross cultural competences spousal support motivational questions time of assignment emotional competences previous international experience language fluency social relational skills cultural differences and organizational recruitment and selection process 64 Literary and screen portrayals EditFiction Edit Expatriate milieus have been the setting of many novels and short stories often written by authors who spent years living abroad The following is a list of notable works and authors by approximate date of publication 19th century American author Henry James moved to Europe as a young man and many of his novels such as The Portrait of a Lady 1881 The Ambassadors 1903 and The Wings of the Dove 1902 dealt with relationships between the New World and the Old From the 1890s to 1920s Polish born Joseph Conrad wrote a string of English language novels drawing on his seagoing experiences in farflung colonies including Heart of Darkness 1899 Lord Jim 1900 and Nostromo 1904 1900s 1910s German American writer Herman George Scheffauer was active from 1900 to 1925 English writer W Somerset Maugham a former spy set many short stories and novels overseas such as The Moon and Sixpence 1919 in which an English stockbroker flees to Tahiti to become an artist and The Razor s Edge 1944 in which a traumatised American pilot seeks meaning in France and India Ford Madox Ford used spa towns in Europe as the setting for his novel The Good Soldier 1915 about an American couple a British couple and their infidelities 1920s A Passage to India 1924 one of the best known books by E M Forster is set against the backdrop of the independence movement in India Ernest Hemingway portrayed American men in peril abroad beginning with his debut novel The Sun Also Rises 1926 1930s Graham Greene was a keen traveller and another former spy and from the 1930s to 1980s many of his novels and short stories dealt with Englishmen struggling to cope in exotic foreign places Tender is the Night 1934 the last complete novel by F Scott Fitzgerald was about a glamorous American couple unravelling in the South of France George Orwell drew heavily on his own experiences as a colonial policeman for his novel Burmese Days 1934 Evelyn Waugh satirised foreign correspondents in Scoop 1938 1940s From the mid 1940s to the 1990s American born Paul Bowles set many short stories and novels in his adopted home of Morocco including The Sheltering Sky 1949 65 Malcolm Lowry in Under the Volcano 1947 told the tale of an alcoholic British consul in Mexico on the Day of the Dead 66 1950s From the 1950s to the 1990s American author Patricia Highsmith set many of her psychological thrillers abroad including The Talented Mr Ripley 1955 James Baldwin s novelGiovanni s Room 1956 was about an American man having an affair in Paris with an Italian bartender Anthony Burgess worked as a teacher in Malaya and made it the setting of The Malayan Trilogy 1956 1959 The Alexandria Quartet 1957 1960 was the best known work of Lawrence Durrell who was born in India to British parents and lived overseas for most of his life 1960s English writer Paul Scott is best known for The Raj Quartet 1965 1975 dealing with the final years of the British Empire in India John le Carre made use of overseas settings for The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 1963 and many of his subsequent novels about British spies 1970s In The Year of Living Dangerously 1978 Christopher Koch portrayed the lead up to a 1965 coup in Indonesia through the eyes of an Australian journalist and a British diplomat A Cry in the Jungle Bar 1979 by Robert Drewe portrayed an Australian out of his depth while working for the UN in South East Asia 1990s In both Cocaine Nights 1996 and Super Cannes 2000 J G Ballard s English protagonists uncover dark secrets in luxurious gated communities in the South of France 2000s Platform 2001 was French author Michel Houellebecq s novel of European sex tourists in Thailand Prague 2002 was a debut novel by Arthur Phillips which dealt with Americans and Canadians in Hungary towards the end of the Cold War Shantaram 2003 was a bestselling novel by Gregory David Roberts about an Australian criminal who flees to India 2010s American novelist Chris Pavone has set several thrillers overseas since his debut The Expats 2012 Janice Y K Lee in The Expatriates 2016 dealt with Americans in Hong Kong Tom Rachman in his debut novel The Imperfectionists 2010 wrote of journalists working for an English language newspaper in Rome 67 Memoirs Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2019 Memoirs of expatriate life can be considered a form of travel literature with an extended stay in the host country Some of the more notable examples are listed here in order of their publication date and recount experiences of roughly the same decade unless noted otherwise Medieval In The Travels of Marco Polo c 1300 Rustichello da Pisa recounted the tales of Italian merchant Marco Polo about journeying the Silk Road to China 1930s 1960s In the first half of Down and Out in Paris and London 1933 George Orwell described a life of low paid squalor while working in the kitchens of Parisian restaurants In The America That I Have Seen 1949 Egyptian Islamist Sayyid Qutb denounced the United States after studying there In My Family and Other Animals 1956 and its sequels Gerald Durrell described growing up as the budding naturalist in an eccentric English family on the Greek island of Corfu during the late 1930s In As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning 1969 Laurie Lee told of busking and tramping in his youth across 1930s Spain 1970s 1990s In Letters from Hollywood 1986 Michael Moorcock corresponded with a friend about the life of an English writer in Los Angeles In A Year in Provence 1989 Peter Mayle and his English family adapt to life in Southern France while renovating an old farmhouse In Notes from a Small Island 1995 American writer Bill Bryson described a farewell tour of Britain 2000s In A Year in the Merde 2004 English bachelor Stephen Clarke recounted comic escapades while working in Paris In Eat Pray Love 2006 divorced American Elizabeth Gilbert searched for meaning in Italy India and Indonesia In the early chapters of Miracles of Life 2008 J G Ballard told of his childhood and early adolescence in Shanghai during the 1930s and 1940s Film Edit Films about expatriates often deal with issues of culture shock They include dramas comedies thrillers action adventure films and romances Examples grouped by host country include Argentina Happy Together Austria Before Sunrise The Third Man Belize The Mosquito Coast Cambodia City of Ghosts China Iron and Silk The Painted Veil Seven Years in Tibet Lucy France An American in Paris Charade Dirty Rotten Scoundrels A Good Year Killing Zoe Midnight in Paris The Moderns Ninotchka To Catch a Thief Breathless Hong Kong Love Is a Many Splendored Thing The World of Suzie Wong Already Tomorrow in Hong Kong India Best Exotic Marigold Hotel Carry On Up the Khyber Outsourced A Passage to India Indonesia The Year of Living Dangerously Italy Three Coins in the Fountain Under the Tuscan Sun Japan Lost in Translation Mr Baseball Kenya Clarence the Cross Eyed Lion Born Free Out of Africa Mexico Treasure of the Sierra Madre Morocco Casablanca Naked Lunch The Sheltering Sky Peru Secret of the Incas Saudi Arabia A Hologram for the King Spain Barcelona Sexy Beast Vicky Cristina Barcelona Thailand The Beach The King and I Uganda The Last King of Scotland United Kingdom The Adventures of Barry McKenzie Straw Dogs United States Borat Coming to America Crocodile Dundee How To Lose Friends And Alienate People Leningrad Cowboys Go America Vietnam The Quiet American 1958 and 2002 Unnamed various Eat Pray Love The Ugly American The Wages of Fear Lost Horizon 1937 and 1973 Television Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2019 Reality television has dealt with overseas real estate House Hunters International and A Place in the Sun wealthy Russians in London Meet the Russians British expat couples No Going Back and mismanaged restaurants Ramsay s Costa del Nightmares The final decades of the British Raj have been portrayed in dramas The Jewel in the Crown and Indian Summers Diplomats on a foreign posting have been the basis for drama Embassy documentary The Embassy and comedy Ambassadors British writers in Hollywood have been the subject of comedy Episodes Other settings include British doctors in contemporary India The Good Karma Hospital and a series of British detectives posted to an idyllic Caribbean island Death in Paradise See also EditAlien law Asylum seeker Clientitis Cosmopolitanism Diaspora Domicile law Economic migrant Emigration Emigre Ethnic enclave Existential migration Foreign born Foreign worker Global mobility Human capital flight International student Migrant worker Permanent residency Refugee Settler Statelessness Sex tourismReferences Edit expatriate Definition of expatriate in English by Oxford Dictionaries Oxford Dictionaries English Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 4 February 2018 Castree Noel Rob Kitchen Alisdair Rogers 25 April 2013 A Dictionary of Human Geography 1 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199599868 a b c Definition of expatriate in English Oxford Dictionaries Oxford University Press 2017 Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Definition of expatriate Merriam Webster Merriam Webster 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Definition of migrant in English Oxford Dictionaries Oxford University Press 2017 Archived from the original on 30 September 2016 Definition of migrant Merriam Webster Merriam Webster 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Definition of immigrant in English Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 27 September 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Definition of immigrant Merriam Webster Merriam Webster 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Koutonin Mawuna Remarque 13 March 2015 Why are white people expats when the rest of us are immigrants The Guardian Retrieved 17 April 2015 DeWolf Christopher 29 December 2014 In Hong Kong Just Who Is an Expat Anyway The Wall Street Journal News Corp Retrieved 10 February 2017 United States Revised Statutes Sec 1999 Brock Geoffrey 9 July 2020 Special Feature Tributes to Frederika Randall 1948 2020 The Arkansas International Retrieved 6 February 2021 Definition of flexpatriate Financial Times lexicon The Nikkei Archived from the original on 22 February 2017 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Reiche Sebastian 22 January 2014 Inpatriates On the Term and Academic Findings IESE Business School University of Navarra Retrieved 21 February 2017 Drew Kevin 5 October 2004 Rex patriate games Film takes humorous look at moving and staying abroad CNN Time Warner Retrieved 21 February 2017 McGeown Kate 14 December 2006 Hard lessons in expat paradise BBC News British Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 22 February 2017 Chiu Joanna Sexpat Journalists Are Ruining Asia Coverage Foreign Policy Retrieved 7 September 2022 The Old Sexpats Club members and their young Thai women www telegraph co uk Archived from the original on 2 June 2021 Retrieved 7 September 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Anu Garg 21 February 2013 eggcorn A Word A Day Wollaston Sam 6 January 2015 Rich Russian and Living in London review uber richskis in diamond encrusted cars The Guardian Retrieved 24 February 2017 Grundmann Siegfried 2005 The Einstein Dossiers Science and Politics Einstein s Berlin Period with an Appendix on Einstein s FBI File Springer Berlin Heidelberg p 294 ISBN 978 3 540 25661 8 Oskar Maria Graf timeline expatriated 1934 Archived 1 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Kritikatur Die Welt der Literatur Retrieved 4 December 2011 Cox J L 17 July 1988 The overseas student expatriate sojourner or settler Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 344 179 184 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0447 1988 tb09019 x PMID 3227984 S2CID 25012215 via PubMed Rensimer Lee 2016 International Higher Education for Whom Expatriate Students Choice making and International Im mobility in the Northern United Arab Emirates PDF via Education Resources Information Center Harris Paul Pelham Nick Bright Martin 28 July 2002 Expat Brits live in fear as Saudis turn on the West The Guardian Retrieved 25 February 2017 Dumont Jean Christophe Lamaitre Georges 2 November 2005 Counting Immigrants and Expatriates in OECD Countries OECD Economic Studies 2005 1 49 83 doi 10 1787 eco studies v2005 art3 en ISSN 0255 0822 Finaccord Global Expatriates Size Segmentation and Forecast for the Worldwide Market www finaccord com International Migration 2020 Highlights United Nations Chew J 2004 Research and Practice in Human Resource Management pp 1 30 Vesa Suutari Kristiina Makela 25 September 2007 The career capital of managers with global careers Journal of Managerial Psychology 22 7 628 648 doi 10 1108 02683940710820073 ISSN 0268 3946 Gomez Mejia Luis Balkin David Cardy Robert 2007 Managing Human Resources Upper Saddle River NJ Pearson pp 544 5 ISBN 978 0 13 187067 3 Kraimer M 2016 Themes in Expatriate and Repatriate Research over Four Decades What Do We Know and What Do We Still Need to Learn Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior 3 83 109 doi 10 1146 annurev orgpsych 041015 062437 Pilenzo R September 2013 DOES CULTURE REALLY MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN EXPAT ASSIGNMENTS Expatriates Magazine 2 4 Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Lauring J amp Selmer J 2010 The supportive expatriate spouse An ethnographic study of spouse involvement in expatriate careers International Business Review 19 1 59 69 Caligiuri PM Tarique I 2012 2012 16 In Stahl Gunter K Bjorkman Ingmar Bjorkman Morris Shad eds International Assignee Selection and Cross Cultural Training and Development in Handbook of Research in International Human Resource Management Second Edition 2 ed Cheltenham United Kingdom Edward Elgar Publishing doi 10 4337 9781849809191 00022 ISBN 978 1 84980 919 1 Caligiuri Paula Phillips Jean Lazarova Mila Tarique Ibraiz Burgi Peter 1 January 2001 The theory of met expectations applied to expatriate adjustment the role of crosscultural training The International Journal of Human Resource Management 12 3 357 372 doi 10 1080 09585190121711 ISSN 0958 5192 S2CID 144201096 a b c d e Thomas David 2014 Essentials of International Human Resource Management London SAGE pp 188 189 ISBN 978 1 4129 9591 7 Thomas David 2014 Essentials of International Human Resource Management London SAGE pp 190 193 ISBN 978 1 4129 9591 7 Global Relocation Trends 2010 Global Mobility Solutions 2010 Tungli Z Peiperl M 2009 Expatriate practices in German Japanese U K and U S multinational companies a comparative survey of changes Human Resource Management 48 153 171 doi 10 1002 hrm 20271 Andresen Maike Biemann Torsten Pattie Marshall Wilson 12 April 2015 What makes them move abroad Reviewing and exploring differences between self initiated and assigned expatriation The International Journal of Human Resource Management 26 7 932 947 doi 10 1080 09585192 2012 669780 ISSN 0958 5192 S2CID 153656774 Lee Everett S 1 March 1966 A theory of migration Demography 3 1 47 57 doi 10 2307 2060063 ISSN 1533 7790 JSTOR 2060063 Portes Alejandro Borocz Jozsef 20 June 2018 Contemporary Immigration Theoretical Perspectives on its Determinants and Modes of Incorporation1 International Migration Review 23 3 606 630 doi 10 1177 019791838902300311 PMID 12282796 S2CID 22512597 Andresen Maike Margenfeld Jil 13 April 2015 International relocation mobility readiness and its antecedents Journal of Managerial Psychology 30 3 234 249 doi 10 1108 JMP 11 2012 0362 ISSN 0268 3946 Farcas Diana Goncalves Marta August 2017 Motivations and Cross Cultural Adaptation of Self Initiated Expatriates Assigned Expatriates and Immigrant Workers The Case of Portuguese Migrant Workers in the United Kingdom Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology 48 7 1028 1051 doi 10 1177 0022022117717031 hdl 10071 14796 ISSN 0022 0221 S2CID 149405149 Lauring Jakob Selmer Jan 1 October 2018 Person environment fit and emotional control Assigned expatriates vs self initiated expatriates International Business Review 27 5 982 992 doi 10 1016 j ibusrev 2018 02 010 ISSN 0969 5931 S2CID 148742063 Executives E O Is the Traditional Expat Model Declining 3 Ways Organisations Are Replacing It blog executivesonline co uk Collings D G Scullion H Morley M J 2007 Changing patterns of global staffing in the multinational enterprise Challenges to the conventional expatriate assignment and emerging alternatives PDF Journal of World Business 42 2 198 doi 10 1016 j jwb 2007 02 005 hdl 10379 682 S2CID 153511190 The decline of the traditional expat www eca international com 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 4 351 doi 10 1016 S1090 9516 97 90017 1 Self initiated expatriates SIEs FELOresearch info 2013 Retrieved 9 October 2013 Andresen M Bergdolt F amp Margenfeld J 2012 What distinguishes self initiated expatriates from assigned expatriates and migrants A literature based definition and differentiation of terms In M Andresen A A Ariss M Walther amp K Wolff Eds Self initiated expatriation Individual organizational and national perspectives Routledge Inkson K amp Myers B A 2003 The big OE self directed travel and career development Career Development International 8 4 170 181 Selmer J amp Lauring J 2010 Self initiated academic expatriates Inherent demographics and reasons to expatriate European Management Review 7 3 169 179 Tharenou P 2013 Self initiated expatriates An alternative to company assigned expatriates Journal of Global Mobility 1 3 336 356 Arp Frithjof Hutchings Kate Smith Wendy A 2013 Foreign executives in local organisations An exploration of differences to other types of expatriates Journal of Global Mobility 1 3 312 335 doi 10 1108 JGM 01 2013 0006 Arp Frithjof 2014 Emerging giants aspiring multinationals and foreign executives Leapfrogging capability building and competing with developed country multinationals Human Resource Management 53 6 851 876 doi 10 1002 hrm 21610 Foreign Executives in Local Organisations FELOresearch info 2012 Retrieved 13 July 2012 Arp Frithjof 2013 Typologies What types of foreign executives are appointed by local organisations and what types of organisations appoint them German Journal of Research in Human Resource Management Zeitschrift fur Personalforschung 27 3 167 194 doi 10 1177 239700221302700302 S2CID 56210528 Meier Olivier 2017 The Path to Diversity Women on Assignment Mercer Retrieved 10 September 2019 Expat Insider 2022 www internations org Retrieved 7 September 2022 Journal of Global Mobility The Home of Expatriate Management Research www emeraldinsight com Antecedent factors for success in international assignments the case of expatriates in Peru Retrieved 4 March 2022 http llufb llu lv conference REEP 2017 Latvia Univ Agricult REEP 2017 proceedings 451 456 pdf bare URL PDF Bowles Paul Without Stopping An Autobiography p 275 Power Chris 2 November 2011 Under the Volcano a modernist masterpiece The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 30 August 2019 Taylor DJ 10 April 2010 The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman The Guardian Retrieved 14 September 2019 External links EditExpatriate at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Travel information from Wikivoyage Data from Wikidata Expatriate at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Expatriate amp oldid 1138528919, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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