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59
contact with their old friends and colleagues, but formed contacts with other
expatriates and host-country nationals, as well as receiving help from support
organizations. When they returned, this constellation changed again and they lost
contact with their new friends and other expatriates.
Respondents regarded family as highly important in every phase of the assign-
ment, which is why the concept of family is located adjacent to the expatriate
employee in Fig. 3.2
. This does not imply that the family always stands by the
expatriate’s side. Rather, the fi
gure refers to the ideational value of family as such,
a perspective that is even more compelling when one is separated from the family.
During the preparation phase family is followed in precedence by friends, col-
leagues, superiors, and the organization itself. Respondents also pointed out that
keeping in contact with family members demanded additional effort during the
sojourn. Contacts with friends, in particular, suffered due to the lack of time. This
was refl
ected in statements such as “One can only work, eat, and sleep,” or, if the
expatriate was accompanied by a spouse, “Only a busy wife is a good wife, a bored
wife is torture
.
”
During the sojourn, this list expands to include new colleagues, other expatriates,
and host-country nationals, as well as the supporting organizations. The relationship
with friends from home becomes less important (indicated by the dotted lines in
Fig. 3.2 ). In the phase of returning, the expatriates try to reestablish contact with the
network partners from the preparation phase and to maintain relationships newly
formed during the sojourn, but these, too, lose importance. It is, therefore, crucial to
point out that there is hardly any networking activity between the network partners
themselves. The connecting lines in Fig. 3.2 show relationships between the expatri-
ate employee and various network partners, but only a single link among the net-
work partners. In their review of organizational social network research, Kilduff and
Brass (
2010 ) emphasized its focus on relations between actors.
The Role of Social Support
In recent years, a number of research projects have focused on social support in
various contexts, including family, friends, and work (e.g., Glazer, 2006 ; Stroebe &
Stroebe, 1998 ). The concept of social support is founded in various research tradi-
tions that also deal with the interrelationship of social support and mental health.
From the standpoint of a resource concept (Udris, 1997 ), social support is not
only an external resource that a person receives but also an internal resource that an
individual can develop (Udris & Frese, 1999 ). Dücker (
1995 ) describes various
forms of support experienced by members of a network: material support (e.g.,
fi nancial), support in the form of helping behavior (e.g., care in the case of illness),
emotional support (e.g., affection, trust, or sympathy), feedback (e.g., social confi r-
mation), informative support, orientation assistance (e.g., advice), and positive
social activities (e.g., fun and recreation.
3 Interpersonal Networks in Foreign Assignments and Intercultural Learning Processes
zurück zum
Buch Knowledge and Networks"
Knowledge and Networks
- Titel
- Knowledge and Networks
- Autoren
- Johannes Glückler
- Emmanuel Lazega
- Ingmar Hammer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Ort
- Cham
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-45023-0
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 390
- Schlagwörter
- Human Geography, Innovation/Technology Management, Economic Geography, Knowledge, Discourse
- Kategorie
- Technik