posted on 2021-11-09, 21:08authored byEmily Greenbank
Abstract
Navigating the labour market in a new context can be a challenge for any migrant, and particularly so for former refugees,
who are often unable to find employment appropriate for their qualification and experience levels. This study takes an Interactional
Sociolinguistic approach to exploring how three former refugees navigate employability in narrative, from the social constructionist
perspective of employable identities, emergent from and negotiated within discourse. The study focuses specifically on the
participants’ discursive navigation of their various (Bourdieusian) social and cultural capital and its importance to labour market
performance. Evident in the data are the difficulties of translating – or having recognised – a lifetime’s accumulation of capital, often
rendered worthless upon migration. Such challenges impact upon forced migrants’ ability to successfully enact employability, and
subsequently upon their imagined (future) identities. This research highlights former refugees’ complex challenges involved with successful
navigation of employability in a new context.
History
Preferred citation
Greenbank, E. (2021). Employable identities. Narrative Inquiry. https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.19103.gre