Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The Experiences of Migrant Job Seekers, Looking...

Electronic data

  • 2022depauwphd

    Final published version, 16 MB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY-NC: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

The Experiences of Migrant Job Seekers, Looking for Work Online

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Published

Standard

The Experiences of Migrant Job Seekers, Looking for Work Online. / de Pauw, Denise.
Lancaster University, 2022. 293 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

de Pauw, D. (2022). The Experiences of Migrant Job Seekers, Looking for Work Online. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1602

Vancouver

de Pauw D. The Experiences of Migrant Job Seekers, Looking for Work Online. Lancaster University, 2022. 293 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1602

Author

de Pauw, Denise. / The Experiences of Migrant Job Seekers, Looking for Work Online. Lancaster University, 2022. 293 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{84fa54d00e1d46659edfe7d74d2db72b,
title = "The Experiences of Migrant Job Seekers, Looking for Work Online",
abstract = "Employment is acknowledged as an important mechanism for migrant integration, yet finding work can be difficult, even for highly skilled professionals. Substantial research exists on employment, recruitment, migrant workers, inclusion, and work-related language and literacy skills, yet little of this is directly concerned with job- seeking literacy practices, and specifically, online job applications. This study contributes to the literature on employment support for migrants by focusing on online mediated job applications, and would be relevant to those supporting any jobseekers, not only migrants.Using an ethnographic approach, three case studies were conducted, concerning migrant jobseekers in England from different age groups, linguistic and educational backgrounds. Video recordings, job-seeking texts and field notes were collected, and semi-scripted interviews were conducted. The data was analysed using mediated discourse analysis, drawing on literacy practices and activity theory.This study identifies how digital mediation structures online recruitment by privileging the literacy practices associated with globally networked sophisticated digital information managers. It contributes job search literacies as an addition to other employability literacies, such as self-promotion (e.g. Bhatia, 1993) and reading the market (Del Percio, 2018), necessary for online jobseekers. It theorises online job- seeking as a recursive self-appraisal cycle, which begins with searching, and during which career identity is continually adjusted in relation to perceptions of the job criteria and motivation, as the application progresses. Accurate self-appraisal and formulating a credible career identity require the development of employability literacies underpinned by specialised advice, from the relevant field of employment, and the study concludes that this is where employability support should be focused. This support is vital for highly educated and low educated migrants alike, looking for paid and unpaid work.",
keywords = "employability, online job seeking, Literacies, Migrants, mediated discourse analysis, Activity theory, new literacy studies",
author = "{de Pauw}, Denise",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1602",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - The Experiences of Migrant Job Seekers, Looking for Work Online

AU - de Pauw, Denise

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Employment is acknowledged as an important mechanism for migrant integration, yet finding work can be difficult, even for highly skilled professionals. Substantial research exists on employment, recruitment, migrant workers, inclusion, and work-related language and literacy skills, yet little of this is directly concerned with job- seeking literacy practices, and specifically, online job applications. This study contributes to the literature on employment support for migrants by focusing on online mediated job applications, and would be relevant to those supporting any jobseekers, not only migrants.Using an ethnographic approach, three case studies were conducted, concerning migrant jobseekers in England from different age groups, linguistic and educational backgrounds. Video recordings, job-seeking texts and field notes were collected, and semi-scripted interviews were conducted. The data was analysed using mediated discourse analysis, drawing on literacy practices and activity theory.This study identifies how digital mediation structures online recruitment by privileging the literacy practices associated with globally networked sophisticated digital information managers. It contributes job search literacies as an addition to other employability literacies, such as self-promotion (e.g. Bhatia, 1993) and reading the market (Del Percio, 2018), necessary for online jobseekers. It theorises online job- seeking as a recursive self-appraisal cycle, which begins with searching, and during which career identity is continually adjusted in relation to perceptions of the job criteria and motivation, as the application progresses. Accurate self-appraisal and formulating a credible career identity require the development of employability literacies underpinned by specialised advice, from the relevant field of employment, and the study concludes that this is where employability support should be focused. This support is vital for highly educated and low educated migrants alike, looking for paid and unpaid work.

AB - Employment is acknowledged as an important mechanism for migrant integration, yet finding work can be difficult, even for highly skilled professionals. Substantial research exists on employment, recruitment, migrant workers, inclusion, and work-related language and literacy skills, yet little of this is directly concerned with job- seeking literacy practices, and specifically, online job applications. This study contributes to the literature on employment support for migrants by focusing on online mediated job applications, and would be relevant to those supporting any jobseekers, not only migrants.Using an ethnographic approach, three case studies were conducted, concerning migrant jobseekers in England from different age groups, linguistic and educational backgrounds. Video recordings, job-seeking texts and field notes were collected, and semi-scripted interviews were conducted. The data was analysed using mediated discourse analysis, drawing on literacy practices and activity theory.This study identifies how digital mediation structures online recruitment by privileging the literacy practices associated with globally networked sophisticated digital information managers. It contributes job search literacies as an addition to other employability literacies, such as self-promotion (e.g. Bhatia, 1993) and reading the market (Del Percio, 2018), necessary for online jobseekers. It theorises online job- seeking as a recursive self-appraisal cycle, which begins with searching, and during which career identity is continually adjusted in relation to perceptions of the job criteria and motivation, as the application progresses. Accurate self-appraisal and formulating a credible career identity require the development of employability literacies underpinned by specialised advice, from the relevant field of employment, and the study concludes that this is where employability support should be focused. This support is vital for highly educated and low educated migrants alike, looking for paid and unpaid work.

KW - employability

KW - online job seeking

KW - Literacies

KW - Migrants

KW - mediated discourse analysis

KW - Activity theory

KW - new literacy studies

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1602

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1602

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -