Abstract
Keywords
Introduction
With a focus on the mobility of highly skilled Swedish labour migrants, 1 the present article examines implicit assumptions connected to norm-breaking behaviour in the workplace and explores the strategies used to deal with potential norm-breaking behaviour. It is argued that transnational labour market mobility can render visible hidden norms and default modes of behaviour in professional settings, due to outsiders’ ability to question social norms. But not all migrant employees challenge norms due to a self-image of superiority, wherefore the article distinguishes between privileged and less privileged outsiders.
The conditions for transnational labour market mobility have changed radically during recent decades, particularly in the European context. Since the establishment of the European Single Market and the four freedoms connected to it (i.e. free movement of goods, capital, services and labour), intra-European labour market mobility has increased (Eurydice, 2012). Besides the European legislation allowing and facilitating mobility, existent norms and values of Western European dominance are believed to affect the situation for European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA) migrants and to be of importance for individuals’ transnational mobility; white middle-class Western Europeans, compared to non-white, are more likely to feel at home and be recognized worldwide (Faist et al., 2013). Such embedded histories affect the self-image and expectations of white, Western migrants (Ahmed, 2007). Nevertheless, real-life experiences may turn out to be more difficult than expected (Wallinder, 2019). By leaving behind habitual social contexts embedded in the native language, modes of behaviour and cultural praxis, previously ‘taken-for-granted’ behaviours may feel inadequate and lead professionals, educated and trained elsewhere, to feel that their core identity as a successful worker is being called into question (Huot and Rudman, 2010).
It is argued here that we need to understand how labour migrants perceive norms and the implications of norm-breaking behaviour in the context of the workplace as well as their self-image and expectations. It is likely that labour migrants perceive themselves as something ‘other’ vis-a-vis their (local) colleagues abroad, the implication of norm-breaking being ‘otherness’ (see Schütz, 1944). The present article draws on a study of highly motivated and educated Swedes with different class- and ethnic backgrounds, 2 employed in London and Munich in the IT sector, engineering, finance/banking, public health or international relations (i.e. globally recognized and legitimized qualifications, see Weiss, 2005). All interviewees moved for career reasons following graduation and subsequent employment experience in Sweden. The aim is to uncover implicit assumptions among the highly skilled Swedish migrants employed in the UK or Germany, and, further, to explore the strategies used when confronting potential norm-breaking behaviour in everyday life in the workplace.
Previous studies of (educated) Turkish and Kurdish women migrating to Germany or the UK suggest that migrants’ professional ‘success’ abroad is something that occurs ‘against the odds’ (Erel, 2010: 650). In the case of highly skilled Swedish migrants, however, their professional mobility (and recognition) abroad may often be more taken for granted, and even anticipated or expected. As shown, highly skilled Swedish migrants’ superior position is tied to their self-image. This self-image reflects an expected ‘privileged otherness’ among many of them that may be deeply bound to norms and values affecting both their conditions for mobility (see Ahmed, 2007) and their perceived ability to exit when required (Hannerz, 2006). In this respect, Swedish migrants do not consider themselves as immigrants (Wallinder, 2019).
In the following, a background to the study is provided, along with a short review of previous literature, emphasizing that social status and cultural practice are contextual. Thereafter, methodological reflections are offered. Finally, a brief description of the main results is provided, followed by a concluding discussion.
Highly skilled and mobile employees in Europe
The existing European mobility agenda promotes international transportability of expertise and competences. The Bologna Declaration, agreed upon by European Ministers of Education in 1999, aims at a united European university system (i.e. the European Higher Education Area) (Eurydice, 2012), and the standardization of qualifications to facilitate transnational labour market mobility among highly skilled individuals. The standardization of qualifications has led to a more intense focus on individual aspects and opportunities in a transnational labour market (Lindberg, 2009). Whether these attempts to standardize higher education qualifications actually have caused greater de facto transportability of qualifications and competences does not seem to be measurable as yet. However, equality of mobility will probably never be achieved, notwithstanding the great amount of ‘European rebranding’, which will not be able to disguise the actual inequality found among European citizens (Burrell, 2016: 5). This inequality mirrors the fact that transnational mobility (and/or labour migration) can be seen as a question of access to social space, such as informal belongingness and connections to relevant transnational networks (see Faist et al., 2013).
Although the European Union is based on the idea of free movement of labour, aiming for an integrated Europe, most Europeans remain rather local and apply for positions in their country of birth (Andreotti et al., 2015: 2). However, highly educated migrants often have access to the silent knowledge –
However, the question of access to social space in workplace contexts needs to be recognized as an intersectional component (Tatlu and Özbilgin, 2012): it is not only educational qualifications that matter for achieving social recognition abroad, but also other kinds of privilege and resources, embedded in implicit ideas about Western European worldwide dominance – ideas that shape individuals’ expectations of experiencing social recognition across national borders (Erel, 2010; Samaluk, 2016). While some migrant groups are defined as ‘problems’ in local society, others are classified as ‘expatriates’ and face no devaluation based on, for example, their alleged unwillingness to integrate. Thus, ‘expatriates’ experience personal recognition abroad (Weiss, 2005). Western/Eastern European markers encompass on-going colonial relations within Europe beyond the question of whiteness, as migrants from Eastern to Western European countries tend to be de-skilled and/or devalued in the host society (Currie, 2007). Skilled migrants from Eastern European countries may choose self-deskilling, indicating a perceived self-inferiority as compared to an ‘imagined Western superiority’ (Samaluk, 2016: 460). The Western European highly skilled Swedish migrants in the present study are thus privileged and mobile in relation to their transnationally recognized qualifications and national origin. These privileges are believed to affect not only their formal mobility opportunities, but also their self-image and expectations (Wallinder, 2019).
Theoretical framework
This section provides theoretical tools useful for understanding the privileges and specific norms and values experienced by the highly skilled Swedes in their workplaces in Germany and the UK. For the understanding of the interviewees’ strategies and experiences of norm-breaking behaviour in the workplace, Goffman’s theories of
The trinity of habitus, (trans)national social field and capital
A social field is a system of relations and positions in which specialized agents (e.g. professionals) compete over the same resources. Such processes take place according to particular field-specific rules (
If we possess the appropriate habitus, we can sense what is correct behaviour in a particular situation without risking ‘becoming a stranger’ (e.g. the ability to command a language freely is often taken for granted by insiders in a particular social setting) (Schütz, 1944: 505). Thus, implicit knowledge or habitus is context-dependent, and the specific cultural requirements become visible when norms are broken or violated (Scheer, 2012). For migrant employees, educated and trained elsewhere, the local language-related rules and context-specific silent acceptance may be difficult to understand, perhaps causing them to feel like strangers (Schütz, 1944). Thus, social norms must be maintained in everyday interactions.
Goffman’s (1986) study of ‘everything but ordinary behaviour’ was entitled frame analysis, suggesting that social interaction between individuals is context-dependent and that the interaction is framed (cf. Scheer, 2012, and her definition of habitus). Participants work hard to maintain a shared social frame, but the regulation – or control – of a social interaction occurs consciously or subconsciously. Violation of the common social frame in a certain situation is possible, but this does not happen easily. In everyday activity, however, social frames can quickly be changed, but mainly by socially respectful people, while disrespectful people may be stigmatized as outsiders for breaking the same social frames.
Goffman’s (1986) idea of primary (cultural) frameworks refers to how social events become meaningful within a particular group: the workplace is embedded in a cultural context, wherefore labour market (dis)advantages need to be analysed in its situated and relational context (see also Tatlu and Özbilgin, 2012). In the analyses, such frames for understanding implicit social adjustments (without becoming ‘othered’ or a stranger, see Schütz, 1944) are stressed in combination with Bourdieu’s formative notion of habitus – an internalized sense that shapes our taken-for-granted behaviours and expectations. In fact, habitus can function as an exclusion mechanism (Girard and Bauder, 2007), something that becomes evident when analysing social interaction between individuals from different social groups.
Prevailing norms and values in the workplace
While EU/EEA mobility from Central and Eastern Europe is widely explored (e.g. Anderson et al., 2006; Currie, 2007; Samaluk, 2016), research has focused less on EU/EEA migration of highly skilled individuals from Western European countries. For Eastern European migrants in Western societies, destination workplaces can become situations of disjuncture where employees experience social skill mismatch. Along with imperial dominance, Western societies are connected to norms and practices related to, for example, democracy, capitalism, human rights, transparency, accountability and gender equality (Grabowska, 2017). Therefore, migrants from Western societies most likely expect their social skills to be recognized in the abroad workplace setting. This possibility to feel recognized by achieving a balance between the individual’s practical sense and the existent social field can create a feeling of ‘being at home’ (Bourdieu, 1990: 66). Although cross-national diversity in professional behaviour is widely anticipated, research tends to focus on normative differences between the West contra ‘the rest’ (e.g. Grabowska, 2017; Spence et al., 2016). Despite their ethnic privilege (Vershinina et al., 2011), Western migrants may also experience contradictions and norm-breaking in the abroad workplace setting and the process of meaning-making and perception of a conversation and social settings may be affected (see Marshall and Foster, 2002). However, privilege needs to be understood as relational, as there are multiple relations of power taking place within workplace organizations that are complicated by class, race/ethnicity, gender and/or other differences (Tatlu and Özbilgin, 2012).
By means of impression management (Goffman, 1990: 219), individuals can influence their perception of a person, object or event to suit their needs and goals. Furthermore, individuals’
Accordingly, employees’ situation in the workplace may not only be connected to existing norms and values, but also to their situated feelings, which may cause emotions such as humiliation or even aversion. According to Scheer (2012), emotions are situational, relational and context-dependent. Nevertheless, when the understanding of local society and national competences are integrated transnationally, a ‘transnational social field’ (Nedelcu, 2012: 1345) is created. However, there may be ‘no real commitment to any particular other culture’ when one knows the exit (Hannerz, 2006: 200): Swedish migrants in Germany or the UK have a privileged ‘invisible status’ as legal white European migrants (Lulle et al., 2017: 2). Further, the Swedish welfare state contributes to perceived security and the ability to (partially) exit (Andreotti et al., 2015; Wallinder, 2019) if problems should arise. Therefore, a refined analysis of privilege and migration is required, exposing the symbolic power of global inequalities.
Methodological description
The article draws on a purposive sample of 21 semi-structured interviews with highly skilled mid-career Swedish labour migrants (i.e. no accompanying partner) between 27 and 45 years of age working in Munich (11) or London (10), and approximately equally gender-distributed between the two countries. The interviewees were mid-career employees (aged 27–52) corresponding to the ISCO-08 Major Group 2 professionals (International Labour Office [ILO], 2012), with tertiary training and previous work experience from Sweden. 3 They represent a prototype of the flexible and driven individual who is searching for a transnational experience to improve his/her employment opportunities (Tilly, 2005). To match these criteria, all interviewees were born, raised and had graduated in Sweden, they had spent a period living and working in either of the two foreign cities and they were not accompanying partners. The interviewees were primarily employed in private companies, several in multinational companies, predominantly in the financial and technical sector, but importantly, they were not employed as managers themselves. About one-third of the interviewees were on leave from permanent Swedish jobs. Swedish employment legislation protects employees with permanent employment contracts (see Berglund et al., 2017), which allowed the interviewees to return to Sweden whenever they wished. Two interviewees were second-generation immigrants to Sweden.
Interviews were conducted between April and October 2014 with a follow-up phase in January 2016. All interviews were recorded with the interviewees’ permission and lasted between one hour and two-and-a-half hours. Interviewees were recruited from existing informal/formal societies and networks connecting Swedes abroad in both cities. 4 Germany and the UK are two major destinations for EU/EEA migration (Bruzelius et al., 2016), and networks connecting Swedes abroad are prominent there (Wallinder, 2018).
The analysis of the interview material is inspired by a constructivist orientation, acknowledging the importance of multiple and varied meanings in understanding how the interviewees position themselves socially and historically through social interaction (Charmaz, 2014). While conducting the interviews, continuous memoing provided a good basis for developing new aspects to focus on in future interviews. While processing the interview transcripts, initial coding, with open codes closely related to the data, was summarized using the Atlas.ti coding program. Thereafter, more focused codes emerged, generating code labels such as
Analysis: Different modes of ‘othering’
The interviewed migrants increasingly experienced orientation difficulties in their new social environment because their habitus did not give them a symbolic advantage. Most migrants expected to be a rather privileged, mild version of an immigrant, an ‘immigrant light’ (man, Munich, late 20s), speaking the same language and having the same skin-colour as local employees (see also Wallinder, 2019). However, their experiences in the actual workplace tell a different story. Despite having some success in incorporating their own feeling for the game at work, all interviewees expressed a fear of incorrectly interpreting and delivering on management requirements. Fear of not doing the right thing caused a great deal of stress and anxiety, because in Sweden the interviewees were used to openly discussing assigned tasks with their manager/s in a way that was not commonplace in their new workplace. The strategies they used were often connected to a particular setting.
Strategies and attitudes concerning the workplace culture
The analyses reflect different strategies, which can (partly) be understood in relation to the type of employment contract the migrants hold. As stated, many employees were on leave from permanent Swedish contracts, allowing them to return to their home country whenever they wanted. This protection from unemployment enabled them to accept rather low employment security abroad: unlike their local colleagues, these ‘free movers’ were not afraid of sudden job loss. Therefore, the priority of maintaining loyalty to the social setting at work and behaving cautiously (see Goffman, 1990: 219) might be less important, and their impression management might be perceived as less disciplined: these free movers were less likely to show higher levels of adaptability to the specific work-life culture due to their experienced labour market security. Thus, employment conditions affected how the interviewees perceived their co-workers abroad: ‘It is easier to remain on leave from my job
Thus, the migrants handled a disrupted framing at work either by Here, you need to show the best version of yourself. This was really difficult, indeed. Because you need to make yourself visible, you need to speak and laugh loudly. I also got the feeling that many are impatient. And if you don’t behave accordingly, they will tell you. That has been really difficult to handle. (Woman, Munich, early 30s)
The interviewees had initially intended to explore (quoting) ‘the cosmopolitan vibes’ in their current city, and the various imaginations of urban lifestyle: in their first year(s), the interviewees often socialized with labour migrants from Western European (and/or North American) countries (i.e. migrants with a similar ‘imagined Western superiority’ (Samaluk, 2016: 460) who also were employed in qualified positions abroad). Later on, they often lacked the energy to participate in the numerous activities that were offered, fearing a professional disadvantage contrary to what was expected. Such habitus dislocation made their workdays feel professionally and emotionally demanding: adapting to their new cultural context was more difficult than expected and professional norms often differed from their own ideals and values regarding hierarchal relations and language codes. An engineer in his late 20s, who has lived in Munich for two years since he had resigned from his employment in Sweden, expresses deep frustration, as he often felt (quoting) ‘like an idiot or a child’ in professional contexts, due to his lack of language proficiency: I really would like to be able to tell them off. And to be able to express, to be so fluent in German that I could say, ‘You don’t need to behave like that, you don’t need to speak to me as if I were stupid’. Because I’m not.
The interviewees often expressed a strategy of
Developing personally and professionally in a foreign labour-market context was mainly believed to be possible if one could acquire the appropriate behaviour in collegial settings (along with Ashley and Empson, 2017). To learn these rules, the migrants reported working more hours in an attempt to respond to the experienced requirements. Still, some of them never really felt they could accept the way they were expected to behave. No matter how hard they tried, they did not fit in: Even if I now am fluent in German and I communicate in German, that is, language will always be an obstacle for me. There are regional accents and there are people who can’t accept that it takes a little bit more effort for them to talk to me. Or maybe, that they need to listen until I’ve finished talking. I can’t participate in interesting debates in the same way, or get my opinion across in the same way. This is something I consider an obstacle to my future career, to be perfectly honest. (Man, Munich, late 30s)
As shown, the migrants’ ability to ‘command the language’ is not always in accord with the present professional social field, and an ‘othering’ position as a stranger appears (Schütz, 1944: 505). Being a foreigner has disadvantages that many native-born employees do not experience: In the German context, one needs to address someone formally using titles in official settings and, in both settings, there are language uncertainties. Still, most of the Swedish migrants in Germany seemed to put considerable effort into adapting to the local language-related ‘rules’: ‘One needs to accept these things. Because the consequences of not doing it are worse than the possible discomfort one feels addressing someone by using her PhD title, in that way’ (woman, Munich, late 30s). Still, feelings of otherness were often present even when engaging in impression management, and the fear of doing or saying the ‘wrong’ things often caused negative emotions. Such negative emotions were handled differently: for maintaining status and respect (Scheer, 2012), the migrants either confronted or ignored the social framing in a certain workplace interaction, which was manifested somewhere between
Otherness as a constraint
Different expectations and norms in the migrants’ work life may be disrupted, and this often puts them in the position of being something ‘other’ vis-a-vis their colleagues: somewhere between a rewarding exception and otherness. The latter position may cause social limitation and have behavioural consequences (Goffman, 1990: 185). One man in his mid-30s, working in Germany on leave from a permanent contract in Sweden, described how he often questioned the top-down allocation of work assignments and wanted his manager to explain such decisions. In his previous Swedish collegial setting, he experienced that understanding things from (quoting) ‘a more holistic view’ was highly important and could even lead to promotion, because he was assuming responsibility for the process. However, his present manager in the more hierarchical German workplace environment would not accept his questioning, which was seen as doubting the manager’s mandate and formal authority. As a result, the interviewee felt ashamed because he had been transformed into an uncomfortable other who did not behave according to the rules of the game. Another specific situation was when questioning reasons for the project, as well as the specific tasks assigned, which caused the manager to ‘bang his hand on the table’. The interviewee, however, only wanted to understand the reasons so he could do a ‘good job for the team’ and ‘achieve a promotion’. Finally, he understood that behaving appropriately in the collegial group in Germany involved listening and accepting managers’ decisions and that group meetings were meant for disseminating and informing about managers’ decisions rather than for discussions. Though he accepted the rules of the game, he had difficulties making meaning of the tasks assigned to him. Owing to lack of feedback, he often experienced difficulties in learning appropriate behaviour, in managing the impression he made in his collegial group: I’ve made some major mistakes over recent years, but that was not really easy to understand. Well, it’s difficult to know actually, because you don’t get any feedback. It’s not that someone tells me, ‘yes, that was a mistake’, or ‘that was a big mistake but I understand you anyway’. This is something you won’t hear. You never know that you did something wrong before you actually did something wrong, and this is when it’s maybe already too late.
Appropriate behaviour in collegial settings and in relation to managers was difficult for many of the interviewees. Another man in his late 30s said he simply listens to orders from superordinates, otherwise he might Ultimately, it’s the boss who decides. No matter how much you may think that this is wrong. This is just the way it is. [. . .] The Swedish culture allows an employee to question a manager’s decision, and that I can say this decision is wrong for this or that reason. One is listened to and respected, in Sweden. But here, I got the impression that this is less the case, no attention is paid to that. (Man, London, late 30s)
The quote above exemplifies what the majority of the Swedish migrants expressed: difficulties in accepting the working climate and customs in the country of destination, which caused an inability to accept the current social setting. The emotional expression indicates the need to renegotiate their status position in order to achieve I think that in Sweden, it’s claimed that we Swedes are such sissies. Swedish managers are sissies. There is a culture of unanimous agreement and we are not supposed to have disagreements. Here, people are more, a manager is not afraid of disagreements, to say things that create uneasiness. To dress someone down: ‘You made a mistake there’. A Swedish manager would never approach an employee and say: ‘You made a mistake there’. Just like when I once was told, on one occasion, my British manager said: ‘This thing slipped through your fingers. This document.’ Even if it wasn’t me who compiled it. ‘This document, that is dogs’ breakfast.’ (Man, London, mid-40s)
The interviewee felt rather offended when his manager called him into his office and said he had not performed satisfactorily on a previous task. However, the social frames in a collegial setting can quickly change. The interviewee was immensely surprised by how directly the critique was delivered. While reflecting upon it, the interviewee realized that his only possibility was to (quoting) ‘rewrite it. It slipped through my fingers, so it was my fault.’ Moreover, he expressed that he could understand his manager’s situation and why she was ‘forced’ to ‘crawl for the bigwigs and bully the underlings’. Still, he struggled a great deal with handling this experience without feeling ashamed, though the lesson he learned was how to appropriately handle unpleasant situations. Next time, he would not become upset, because ‘the most important thing is how I behave, the impression I make on my manager’. Thus, what matters is one’s own effort and ability to adapt to a given circumstance, to maintain the impression, even though this type of othering limits interviewees’ mode of behaviour and action in professional situations.
It appears that the managers’ rather straightforward attitudes gave migrants an understanding of accepted workplace behaviour. Following managers’ orders gave a sense of security, though not knowing how to handle these situations was challenging. In sum, the interviewed migrants’ adaptation and acceptance of a latent feeling of shame may challenge a potential transnational feeling for the game in their professional field (cf. Nedelcu, 2012). Further, the behaviour of both the migrant and the employer can describe a framing of existing norms in the given context. Questioning or changing existing norms seems rather unusual, as only respected and powerful people may successfully change the social frames.
Otherness as a resource
In some collegial settings, professional behaviour, subject to cultural norms and values, could remain unchanged and some individuals even felt they were rewarded for confronting taken-for-granted behaviours. In these situations, the
The experience of living and working in a professional setting abroad was often characterized as a way to become ‘a more open-minded human being [through migration] and to have a greater degree of understanding for different points of view. [. . .] One becomes more cosmopolitan by spending time with other nationalities’ (man, Munich, late 30s), meanwhile referring to ‘other nationalities’ as ‘expatriates from Western European countries or the US’. Other examples contradict such generalized migration experiences, namely that the experience abroad automatically renders them ‘more tolerant and open-minded’ than native-born colleagues. Rather, most interviewees have a privileged position as educated Swedes, which enables them to spend time with other (privileged) nationalities and to integrate: ‘Most often, we’re quite tall, with light complexions and all of this. So, I mean, just by looking at us, you cannot say “she is like this and he is like that”. Basically, we do blend in’ (woman, London, mid-30s). The migrant’s self-image of being a tolerant employee who appreciates organizational differences can also be used when failing to master the professional setting. In fact, the migrants’ otherness combined with their status position (e.g. a white Northern European employee) created new social liberties for them, in that they maintained a respectable position even when they broke norms and challenged the prevailing attitudes or expectations at work. Such a situation is illustrated in the following quote: I was stubborn and wanted to use first names, especially in such a small organization like ours. The organization consisted of maybe seven [units]. And then there was a large and a smaller unit, with five or six employees each. So, that was not too many people …. But there was a German who said: ‘But [name of interviewee], you cannot address a colleague using the first name, in such a case one cannot compete for the same position’. No, I said. But it turned out my way (laughs). So,
The interviewee confronted the social establishment in her workplace; for her it was important to implement the German second-person singular pronoun ‘du’ as a universal form of address in her local workplace – the same usage she was familiar with from Sweden, where the country stopped using the plural ‘you’, or ‘ni’, to address superiors in the 1960s. For the interviewee, it took several years to get this small-scale ‘du-reform’ acknowledged, in the end with help from other Scandinavians working in the same company.
In another example, a woman living in Munich, in her late 20s, with parents from Southern Europe who migrated to Sweden in the 1980s, expressed that ‘I will always be a foreigner, wherever I live’ (referring to her dark brown hair and non-Swedish name). Her story expressed a constant feeling of being in opposition, which actually liberated her impression management: she did not need to ‘pretend’ to fit in and to be accepted, as she was aware that she does not belong to the main establishment anyway. In fact, she felt she did not even properly belong to the networks and (quoting) ‘social free-zones’ of Swedes abroad, and therefore she did not identify herself as a superior outsider: she was (quoting, own italic) ‘just a
For two well-educated employees with Asperger’s syndrome,
5
previous experiences of being outsiders in Sweden caused a desire and reason to seek work abroad. This experience, in combination with the outsider status as migrants, led to a new kind of (social) freedom: in Sweden, they experienced that social skills and socialization with co-workers were important, but complicated their focus on specific tasks and working ‘without constant interruption from fellow colleagues’ (man, London, late 40s). The other interviewee expressed that: Well, I have Asperger’s syndrome and this makes it a little difficult to find an appropriate workplace in Sweden. Many job offers, well, when you look at the job offers, they say that you should be social and an extrovert and so on. And this is something I definitely am not. Instead, I need a very relaxed workplace. So, open-plan offices do not work for me [. . .] this is more common in Sweden, in my experience. And the demand for being a very communicative person is another thing that is very complicated for me. A cliché is ‘to be able to keep several balls in the air’. And I can definitely say that this is not a straightforward talent for someone with autism. (Man, Munich, early 40s)
As shown, the two interviewees with Asperger’s syndrome felt like outsiders in Sweden. Their experiences abroad were that they could mind their own business as long as their managers were satisfied with their work. They did not need to socialize and work in teams to the same extent as in Sweden. Above all, being a migrant also allowed for a certain level of ‘odd’ behaviour in collegial settings.
To conclude, the interviewees’ life abroad sometimes generated (rather unexpected) resources, liberating their behaviour and allowing them to challenge norms and social expectations from their past experience in Sweden. The social framing that shapes otherness at work was in most cases a rather privileged otherness, formed by deeply rooted and embodied collective histories. In fact, perceived otherness might matter differently when grounded in
Conclusion
Increased incentives for European transnational labour mobility among the well-educated have taken shape over the past decades. In the present article, highly skilled Swedish labour migrants, employed in the UK or Germany, were assumed to possess an educational and middle-class habitus similar to that of their colleagues in their countries of destination (Ashley and Empson, 2017). As shown in the study, however, this was not always the case. Through its focus on implicit assumptions connected to norm-breaking behaviour in the workplace and the migrants’ strategies used to deal with (potential) ‘otherness’ in the workplace, the article renders visible invisible cultural norms and values that are otherwise taken for granted within the European rhetoric claiming equality of transnational labour migration. Highly skilled trans-mobile European employees possess a certain privilege compared to other groups who might experience more locally bound employment opportunities. Besides the highly skilled migrants’ formal qualifications, having a light complexion may provide an important entry into feeling included in the ‘community of mobile individuals’, a recognition affected by hierarchies of belonging (Erel, 2010). Such preconditions and self-perceptions on the part of the interviewees in the present study made them
Thus, it is important to recognize that individuals’ performances are legitimized in different ways, depending on social status and context (see Tatlu and Özbilgin, 2012). However, despite sectoral differences in employment conditions or work cultural differences between the UK and Germany, the Swedish migrants experienced their position and otherness in a rather similar way: their feeling of being ‘at home’ is negated when they are positioned outside their comfort zone, outside the Swedish labour market with its own ideals, values and social mechanisms related to, for example, hierarchal relations and language codes. Thus, they transgress the taken-for-granted norms within their professional and context-specific social field (Huot and Rudman, 2010). Furthermore, when migrants’ otherness is perceived as a resource (rather than a constraint), it provides a possibility to change the social frames in their workplace setting. Such a distinction describes how the micro-level interactions may affect the macro-level order; that is, how performances come to be legitimized in a particular social establishment. Thus, feeling ‘at home’ is most likely socially oriented; it is constructed in interactions with others and affected by historical narratives of belonging (because Western Europeans are more likely to perceive their otherness as a resource).
Despite the rather micro-oriented order emphasized in a social interaction (Goffman, 1986), it is important to conceptualize the workplace settings in relation to a macro-structured order (see also Huot and Rudman, 2010). The results generated herein highlight the importance of culturally oriented values in framing both accepted formal and informal professional behaviour. These cultural frames are embodied via habitus, providing implicit norms that facilitate social interaction. Thus, the norms change depending on social context (Scheer, 2012). For someone to feel socially liberated when transgressing norms, a feeling of pride and respect might be important. Moreover, such feelings would seem to be connected to structural conditions and a perceived ability to exit (see Hannerz, 2006) the current workplace without loss of social security – in this case by remaining on leave from a permanent employment contract in Sweden or relying on a collegial network of Swedes within the origin as well as the destination context. The perceived ability to exit allows the migrants to take a more distanced strategy in situations of norm-breaking, enabling them to retain their status and feel respected even in situations of low adaptability to the specific work-life culture. However, a feeling of not belonging to the category of Swedish migrants abroad, not being able to enjoy the white privilege it is associated with, can also become liberating; then you do not need to pretend to fit in as you may feel like an outsider anyway. Yet, when a feeling of shame appeared in a social setting, norm-breaking was perceived in a constraining manner: rather surprisingly, a person who may expect to move rather freely across social and cultural borders (due to his/her privileged Western origins) may suddenly feel unable to maintain that impression. In such situations, the migrants may blame the norm – not themselves – for behaving improperly, thus elevating them to the position of (a self-imagined) superior other.
The present article puts forward problems associated with achieving an inclusive professional social field, where the understandings of local society and competences are integrated transnationally. In fact, the construction of an inclusive European transnational labour market would seem to be a more complex project to achieve than by solely promoting standardization of qualifications (cf. Eurydice, 2012). Inevitably, transnational mobility causes disruptions due to a change of social context – both privately and professionally. Considering that plenty of research on EU/EEA mobility focuses on migration from central and eastern Europe, some of it also utilizing a Bordieuian lens to explore migration, whiteness and ethnic privilege at work (Anderson et al., 2006; Currie, 2007; Samaluk, 2016; Vershinina et al., 2011), this article fills a gap in the research looking at intra-EU migration of highly skilled individuals from Western European countries. While intra-European migrants from Central and Eastern Europe may choose self-deskilling due to a perceived self-inferiority (Samaluk, 2016), migrants from Western countries like Sweden instead express an imagined self-superiority. Owing to such privileged self-image reflected in their embodied habitus (Bourdieu, 1990), Swedish migrants can expect a personal recognition and acceptance while they are not expected to integrate in the local workplace. Instead, their self-superiority allows migrants to escape the disciplinary aspects of impression management by becoming disloyal to the social settings at work, which enables them to challenge norms and confront hierarchal relations at the workplace. However, the experienced otherness stands in sharp contrast to their expectations, making the mobility become more difficult than expected.
