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Situational ethnicity and identity negotiation: 'indifference' as an identity negotiation mechanism

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posted on 2022-10-05, 20:42 authored by Madhumita Banerjee, Paurav Shukla, Nicholas AshillNicholas Ashill
Purpose: While the literature on migration highlights the reshaping of host and immigrant population in countries, there is a paucity of research in marketing investigating the evolving dynamics for acculturation. The purpose of this study is to further the understanding of the emerging phenomenon of acculturation and identity negotiation. Design/methodology/approach: Three experiments examined situational ethnicity, self-construal and identity negotiation in home and host culture work and social settings. Study 1 and Study 2 were conducted in the United Kingdom (UK), where the host country is the majority population. Study 3 was conducted in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), where the host country is the minority population. Study 4 utilized qualitative interviews in both countries. Findings: Results from all four studies show that ethnic consumers deploy “indifference” as an identity negotiation mechanism when the host society is the majority population (UK) and when the host society has the minority population (UAE). Originality/value: The authors offer new insights into identity negotiation by ethnic consumers when the host society is the majority population as well as the minority population. “Indifference”, i.e. preferring to neither fit in nor stand out as an identity negotiation mechanism, is deployed in work and social settings of home and host societies. The authors also advance the existing literature on acculturation by examining whether independent and interdependent self-construal influence identity negotiation.

History

Preferred citation

Banerjee, M., Shukla, P. & Ashill, N. (2022). Situational ethnicity and identity negotiation: 'indifference' as an identity negotiation mechanism. International Marketing Review, 39(1), 55-79. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMR-08-2020-0188

Journal title

International Marketing Review

Volume

39

Issue

1

Publication date

2022-02-03

Pagination

55-79

Publisher

Emerald

Publication status

Accepted

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2021-11-29

ISSN

0265-1335

eISSN

1758-6763

Language

en