TY - JOUR
T1 - Fostering assigned expatriates' thriving at work through cultural intelligence and local embeddedness
T2 - The role of relational attachment
AU - Gyensare, Michael Asiedu
AU - Jain, Priyanka
AU - Asante, Eric Adom
AU - Adomako, Samuel
AU - Ofori, Kwame Simpe
AU - Hayford, Yocabel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Past research has noted that assigned expatriates (AEs) face challenges that often lead to premature termination when dispatched by the parent organisation to live and work abroad. However, recent statistics show that most AEs have no knowledge on how to overcome these cultural challenges prior to sending them abroad. Guided by the socially embedded model of thriving at work, we explain how cultural intelligence leads to local embeddedness and the latter's effect on AEs thriving at work. Further, the relationship between local embeddedness and AEs' thriving at work differs across varying levels of relational attachment. Our unique three-month time-lagged data from 234 AEs in eight multinational corporations (MNCs) with subsidiaries in Ghana offered support to our hypotheses. Cultural intelligence promotes local embeddedness, which, in turn, stimulates AEs thriving at work. Additionally, higher levels of relational attachment prompt AEs to leverage their local embeddedness to learn novel things that make them feel alive, energized, and awake at work. Implications for theory and practice, limitations and future research directions are discussed.
AB - Past research has noted that assigned expatriates (AEs) face challenges that often lead to premature termination when dispatched by the parent organisation to live and work abroad. However, recent statistics show that most AEs have no knowledge on how to overcome these cultural challenges prior to sending them abroad. Guided by the socially embedded model of thriving at work, we explain how cultural intelligence leads to local embeddedness and the latter's effect on AEs thriving at work. Further, the relationship between local embeddedness and AEs' thriving at work differs across varying levels of relational attachment. Our unique three-month time-lagged data from 234 AEs in eight multinational corporations (MNCs) with subsidiaries in Ghana offered support to our hypotheses. Cultural intelligence promotes local embeddedness, which, in turn, stimulates AEs thriving at work. Additionally, higher levels of relational attachment prompt AEs to leverage their local embeddedness to learn novel things that make them feel alive, energized, and awake at work. Implications for theory and practice, limitations and future research directions are discussed.
KW - Assigned expatriates
KW - Cultural intelligence
KW - Ghana
KW - Local embeddedness
KW - Multinational corporations (MNCs)
KW - Relational attachment
KW - Thriving at work
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85214343901&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.intman.2024.101222
DO - 10.1016/j.intman.2024.101222
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85214343901
SN - 1075-4253
JO - Journal of International Management
JF - Journal of International Management
M1 - 101222
ER -