Contested imaginaries: workfinding information practices of STEM-trained immigrant women in Canada
ISSN: 0022-0418
Article publication date: 28 March 2024
Issue publication date: 26 June 2024
Abstract
Purpose
This pan-Canadian study examines the information practices of STEM-trained immigrant women to Canada as they navigate workfinding and workplace integration. Our study focuses on a population of highly skilled immigrant women from across Canada and uses an information practice lens to examine their lived experiences of migration and labour market integration. As highly trained STEM professionals in pursuit of employment, our participants have specific needs and challenges, and as we explore these, we consider the intersection of their information practices with government policies, settlement services and the hiring practices of STEM employers.
Design/methodology/approach
We conducted a qualitative study using in-depth interviews with 74 immigrant women across 13 Canadian provinces and territories to understand the nature of their engagement with employment-seeking in STEM sectors. This article reports the findings related to the settlement and information experiences of the immigrant women as they navigate new information landscapes.
Findings
As immigrants, as women and as STEM professionals, the experiences of the 74 participants reflect both marginality and privilege. The reality of their intersectional identities is that these women may not be well-served by broader settlement resources targeting newcomers, but neither are the specific conventions of networking and job-seeking in the STEM sectors in Canada fully apparent or accessible to them. The findings also point to the broader systemic and contextual factors that participants have to navigate and that shape in a major way their workfinding journeys.
Originality/value
The findings of this pan-Canadian study have theoretical and practical implications for policy and research. Through interviews with these STEM professionals, we highlight the barriers and challenges of an under-studied category of migrants (the highly skilled and “desirable” type of immigrants). We provide a critical discussion of their settlement experiences and expose the idiosyncrasies of a system that claims to value skilled talent while structurally making it very difficult to deliver on its promises to recruit and retain highly qualified personnel. Our findings point to specific aspects of these skilled professionals’ experiences, as well as the broader systemic and contextual factors that shape their workfinding journey.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Women and Gender Equity Canada for their support as well as the Institute for Gender and the Economy (Univ. of Toronto), Mitacs, and Soar Innovation (Chatham-Kent). We also thank the formidable participants who shared their experiences and trusted us with their stories.
Citation
Caidi, N., Muzaffar, S. and Kalbfleisch, E. (2024), "Contested imaginaries: workfinding information practices of STEM-trained immigrant women in Canada", Journal of Documentation, Vol. 80 No. 4, pp. 939-961. https://doi.org/10.1108/JD-10-2023-0200
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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