Employee perceptions of repatriation in an emerging economy: the Indian experience
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Human Resource Management
Abstract
As employees' international mobility has increased, implementing repatriation processes has become a significant human resource (HR) issue. Through an exploratory study using a semi-structured interview method, we examine repatriated employees' views about HR activities that facilitate and hinder the repatriation process in the emerging economy of India. Respondents described lack of formal repatriation assistance, no contact person in HR to help with repatriation, and lack of re-entry culture-related training as characteristic of the repatriation process. Managing employees' expectations, along with creating a more sensitive, structured, and strategic HR function, are recommended to improve the repatriation process. From a theoretical perspective, results point to the multi-dimensionality of the repatriation construct and provide evidence of the context-specificity of HR practices. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
DOI Link
Publication Date
1-4-2010
Publisher
Wiley
Volume
Vol.49
Issue
Iss.3
Recommended Citation
Kulkarni, Mukta; Lengnick-Hall, Mark; and Valk, Reimara, "Employee perceptions of repatriation in an emerging economy: the Indian experience" (2010). Faculty Publications. 833.
https://research.iimb.ac.in/fac_pubs/833