1989
DOI: 10.1177/014920638901500403
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The Influence of the Spouse on American Expatriate Adjustment and Intent to Stay in Pacific Rim Overseas Assignments

Abstract: Past international human resource management literature has suggested that most American multinationalfirms that employ expatriate managers have difficulty successfully retaining these managers in overseas assignments. Although some scholars have suggested that the inability of the spouse to adjust is one of the major reasons expatriate managers return early from their overseas assignments, few researchers have attempted to verify empirically a relationship between the spouse's adjustment and the adjustment an… Show more

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Cited by 874 publications
(885 citation statements)
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“…The principal investigator conducted telephone interviews and asked the superior to rate the expatriate on the three work adjustment items derived from Black and Stephens (1989). Superior ratings are generally considered a valid alternative to self-ratings in the performance appraisal literature when the supervisor has the opportunity to observe the employee (Atwater, Ostroff, Yammarino, & Fleenor, 1998).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The principal investigator conducted telephone interviews and asked the superior to rate the expatriate on the three work adjustment items derived from Black and Stephens (1989). Superior ratings are generally considered a valid alternative to self-ratings in the performance appraisal literature when the supervisor has the opportunity to observe the employee (Atwater, Ostroff, Yammarino, & Fleenor, 1998).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The information provided by the spouses may help socialize the expatriate to the host country. Empirical support for this potential crossover effect comes from prior studies (Black & Stephens, 1989;Caligiuri et al, 1998;Shaffer & Harrison, 1998).…”
Section: Crossover Effects Between Spouses and Expatriatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, other researchers (e.g., Church, 1982;Ward et al, 2001) have pointed out that the empirical evidence for the pattern is weak, and recent research by Hotta and Ting-Toomey (2013) indicates that there is considerable individual variation. Other studies, including those carried out by researchers working within education and international business/management as well as psychology (e.g., Black & Stephens, 1989;Selmer & Leung, 2003;Shaffer, Harrison, & Gilley, 1999;Spencer-Oatey & Xiong, 2006;Templer, Tay, & Chandrasekar, 2006;Wilson, 2013), have provided empirical evidence for different domains of adaptation, such as daily life, social life and work/study life, with different levels of adaptation in each. So this raises a number of questions, including the following:…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hammer, Gudykunst, and Wiseman (1978) focused on these factors, and also included the ability to manage psychological stress effectively. Black and Stephens (1989) identified general adjustment involving daily activities, interaction adjustment involving interpersonal relations, and work adjustment related to work and tasks. Ward and her colleagues (see Ward, 2001) have broadly divided adjustment into two categories: psychological and sociocultural.…”
Section: Understanding Intercultural Adjustmentmentioning
confidence: 99%