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Journal article

Conceptualizing Professional Diaspora: International Medical Graduates in Canada

Abstract

This paper applies the concept of diaspora to the analysis of the creation and maintenance of an ethnically diverse community of internationally educated medical graduates residing in Canada. Traditionally, the research on diaspora concerns ethnic communities that preserve their homeland ties while residing in foreign countries. We suggest, however, that ethnic roots are not imperative for the analysis of diasporic communities when other forms of shared values and meanings can become a basis for creation of collective identity. Reconfiguring both the homeland and host country as places of geographical and professional belonging provides opportunity to conceptualize an ethnically diverse group of immigrant physicians residing in Canada as professional diaspora. Probing the interviews with 67 international medical graduates living in Canada, we demonstrate (1) how they create medical diaspora, (2) what myths and sensitivities they share in constructing their professional and/or geographic homelands, and (3) the relationship they develop with their hosting society. We suggest that in spite of the increasing mobility of internationally educated health care providers, the analysis of professional diasporas could become a useful tool for analyzing complex relationships between home countries, hosting countries, and international travelers.

Authors

Neiterman E; Bourgeault IL

Journal

Journal of International Migration and Integration, Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 39–57

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

February 1, 2012

DOI

10.1007/s12134-011-0192-6

ISSN

1488-3473

Labels

Fields of Research (FoR)

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