Professional Journeys of International Medical Graduates in Quebec: Recognition, Uphill Battles, or Career Change

In Quebec and Canada, immigration policies are designed to attract “the best and the brightest.” Once migration occurs, however, the “brain waste” is challenging. This research focuses on the professional trajectories of international medical graduates (IMG) who migrate to Quebec. The main goal is t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of international migration and integration 2017-02, Vol.18 (1), p.223-247
Hauptverfasser: Blain, Marie-Jeanne, Fortin, Sylvie, Alvarez, Fernando
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container_title Journal of international migration and integration
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creator Blain, Marie-Jeanne
Fortin, Sylvie
Alvarez, Fernando
description In Quebec and Canada, immigration policies are designed to attract “the best and the brightest.” Once migration occurs, however, the “brain waste” is challenging. This research focuses on the professional trajectories of international medical graduates (IMG) who migrate to Quebec. The main goal is to understand why certain individuals of a similar occupational group can easily access the doctoral profession while others cannot. Following a qualitative approach, and stemming from IMGs’ perspectives, this article explores the interplay of economic, social, and symbolic resources in a context of highly fragmented institutional resources and protectionism. We are critical of the individual-centered approaches that ignore social norms and constraints. If migrants are free to choose their paths and manner of integration, the “human capital” approach is limited in explaining the heterogeneous pathways within the same professional group. The current structure for professional recognition places unusual constraints on IMGs, whereby some encounter more obstacles than others. The “battle” for professional recognition takes shape in a highly competitive context, one which—although presented as a neutral process—is underlain with ideological, relational, and subjective currents.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Brain
Brain drain
Career changes
Careers
College graduates
Constraints
Demography
Doctors
Education
Employment
Graduates
Heterogeneity
Human capital
Immigrants
Immigration
Immigration policy
Journeys
Labor market
Medical research
Medicine
Migrants
Migration
Neutrality
Noncitizens
Norms
Occupations
Physicians
Population Economics
Professionals
Protectionism
Qualitative analysis
Qualitative research
Quebec Canada
Shape recognition
Social integration
Social networks
Social Sciences
Sociology
Studies
Symbolism
title Professional Journeys of International Medical Graduates in Quebec: Recognition, Uphill Battles, or Career Change
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