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Managing Yopatriates: A Longitudinal Study of Generation Y Expatriates in an Indian Multi-national Corporation
Institution:1. University of Wollongong in Dubai, Knowledge Park, Block 15, Dubai, United Arab Emirates;2. University of Newcastle, Newcastle Business School, Central Coast, Australia;3. Portsmouth Business School, University of Portsmouth, UK;4. Leeds University Business School, UK;5. Aston Business School, UK;1. College of Business, University College Dublin, Blackrock, Dublin, Ireland;2. Durham Business School, Mill Hill Lane, DH1 3LB Durham, England, United Kingdom;1. Telfer School of Management, University of Ottawa, 55 Laurier Avenue East, Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada;2. Laval University, 2325, rue de la Terrasse, Quebec, Quebec G1V 0A6, Canada;3. Newcastle Business School, Northumbria University, NE1 8ST, City Campus East 1- Room 238, United Kingdom;1. Aston Business School, Birmingham B4 7ET, UK;2. Simon Fraser University, Canada;3. Loyola University, Chicago, USA;4. Aston Business School, UK;1. Royal Holloway, London University, United Kingdom;2. Kingston University, United Kingdom;3. Open University, United Kingdom
Abstract:This paper provides a study of HRM practices for a new category of expatriates - “Yopatriates” - who we note as young, highly qualified and mobile, Generation Y (Gen Y) knowledge workers. In contrast to traditional expatriates, Yopatriates typify non-traditional forms of expatriation wherein they seek short-term international assignments to suit their individual (internal, rather than organisational or external) career orientations of learning and travel. We study this group using a case study analysis of a large Indian Multi National Corporation (MNC) delivering global information technology (IT) and business process offshoring (BPO) services. Our study presents the HRM practices adopted to manage both expatriates as well as Yopatriates at the case organisation being studied within an India setting. We further evaluate the extent to which internal HR practices of Yopatriates were characterised, by a desire to emulate or adopt what were regarded as global ‘HR best practices’. Our distinctive contribution lies in extending the literature by developing a distinctive theoretical category of non-traditional expatriates that (1) highlights a need for a different set of HRM practices; and (2) extends the theory of cultural adjustment in the context of Yopatriates. Evidence suggests that these practices were complementary and at the same time contradictory to ‘indigenous’ localised practices during the period of research and complied with two of the four arguments we make in our model.
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