TY - JOUR
T1 - “Willing to go the extra mile”
T2 - an exploration of antecedents of assigned expatriates' work engagement
AU - van Bakel, Marian
AU - Noesgaard, Mette Strange
AU - Michailova, Snejina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2024/8/20
Y1 - 2024/8/20
N2 - Purpose: The expatriation literature (a substantial domain of the International HRM literature) has not paid sufficient attention to the phenomenon of work engagement, which is essential for expatriate success. Equally, research on work engagement in Organizational Behavior, although extensive and mature, has neglected the context of expatriation. Our study bridges the two literature streams to examine the antecedents of expatriates’ work engagement within the distinct context of international assignments. Design/methodology/approach: Through e-interviews with 27 Nordic assigned expatriates in 16 host countries, we delineate and organize antecedents of assigned expatriates’ work engagement in a framework. Findings: We identify two clusters of antecedents – general and specific – characteristic of expatriate settings (e.g. distance to headquarters, pride in being chosen, culture, fewer distractions, success in a foreign context, adjustment, location, and language). We decompose each cluster into contextual and job-related antecedents leading to absorption, dedication, and vigor as three components of work engagement. We depict and organize the relationships in a framework. Originality/value: Our qualitative study connects two bodies of literature that have remained largely independent of each other. In doing this, we contribute to the expatriate literature by presenting a comprehensive picture of antecedents to work engagement and the engagement literature by exploring engagement in a new occupational work setting, namely international assignments.
AB - Purpose: The expatriation literature (a substantial domain of the International HRM literature) has not paid sufficient attention to the phenomenon of work engagement, which is essential for expatriate success. Equally, research on work engagement in Organizational Behavior, although extensive and mature, has neglected the context of expatriation. Our study bridges the two literature streams to examine the antecedents of expatriates’ work engagement within the distinct context of international assignments. Design/methodology/approach: Through e-interviews with 27 Nordic assigned expatriates in 16 host countries, we delineate and organize antecedents of assigned expatriates’ work engagement in a framework. Findings: We identify two clusters of antecedents – general and specific – characteristic of expatriate settings (e.g. distance to headquarters, pride in being chosen, culture, fewer distractions, success in a foreign context, adjustment, location, and language). We decompose each cluster into contextual and job-related antecedents leading to absorption, dedication, and vigor as three components of work engagement. We depict and organize the relationships in a framework. Originality/value: Our qualitative study connects two bodies of literature that have remained largely independent of each other. In doing this, we contribute to the expatriate literature by presenting a comprehensive picture of antecedents to work engagement and the engagement literature by exploring engagement in a new occupational work setting, namely international assignments.
KW - Antecedents
KW - Assigned expatriates
KW - Framework
KW - Qualitative study
KW - Work engagement
U2 - 10.1108/JGM-11-2023-0075
DO - 10.1108/JGM-11-2023-0075
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85200784437
SN - 2049-8799
VL - 12
SP - 369
EP - 393
JO - Journal of Global Mobility
JF - Journal of Global Mobility
IS - 3
ER -