01-04-2013 | Research Article
Neither Ghettoed Nor Cosmopolitan
A Study of Western Women’s Perceptions of Gender and Cultural Stereotyping in the UAE
Published in: Management International Review | Issue 2/2013
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Abstract
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This research examined Western women in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and whether they perceived there to have been gender and cultural stereotyping towards them, and if they exemplified a new breed of cosmopolitan expatriates or the more traditional experience of living within expatriate bubbles.
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The study was based on semi-structured interviews with 27 expatriate females from Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States working in the UAE.
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The female expatriates studied did not perceive gender and cultural stereotyping at work, but identified stereotyping as occurring in the non-work context; some of which resulted from the women engaging in auto-stereotyping. Additionally, the women neither lived within ghettoes in the UAE but nor could they be viewed as truly cosmopolitan; suggesting that expatriates’ working and living experiences need to be understood as operating on a continuum.