“…Through identity-work, people “create, adapt, signify, claim and reject identities from available resources” (Brown, 2017, p. 298) and attempt to “influence the various social identities which pertain to them” (Watson, 2009, p. 431) in attempting to secure a degree of “existential continuity and security” (Alvesson & Willmott, 2002, p. 622). Given the precarity of identities, identity-work is continually needed and is typically seen as a perpetual struggle (Clarke et al, 2009; Driver, 2018). A considerable literature has emerged demonstrating the utility of identity-work in understanding a broad range of individual and organizational phenomena, and in a recent comprehensive review of the identity-work literature, Brown (2017) discerned five distinct approaches to understanding identity-work (see also Caza et al, 2018).…”