Anexpatriate (often shortened toexpat) is a person whoresides outside their country ofcitizenship.[1]
The term often refers to a professional, skilled worker, or student from an affluent country.[2] However, it may also refer toretirees,artists and other individuals who have chosen to live outside their native country.[citation needed]
TheInternational Organization for Migration of theUnited Nations defines the term as 'a person who voluntarily renounces his or hernationality'.[3] Historically, it also referred toexiles.[4]
The UAE is thecountry with the highest percentage of expatriates in the world after the Vatican City, withexpatriates in the United Arab Emirates representing 88% of the population.[5][6]
The wordexpatriate comes from theLatin wordsex'out of' andpatria'native country, fatherland'.
Dictionary definitions for the current meaning of the word include:
These definitions contrast with those of other words with the same meaning, such as:
The varying use of these terms for different groups of foreigners can be seen as implying nuances about wealth, intended length of stay, perceived motives for moving, nationality, and even race. This has caused controversy, with some commentators asserting that the traditional use of the word "expat" has hadracist connotations.[12][13][14]
An older usage of the wordexpatriate referred to anexile.[4] Alternatively, when used as a verbal noun,expatriation can mean the act of someonerenouncing allegiance to their native country, as in the preamble to the United StatesExpatriation Act of 1868 which states: 'the right of expatriation is a natural and inherent right of all people, indispensable to the enjoyment of the rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness'.[15]
Someneologisms have been coined, including:
The term "expatriate" is sometimes misspelled as "ex-patriot", which authorAnu Garg has characterised as an example of aneggcorn.[23]
In Canada someone who resides in a different province on a temporary basis while continuing to hold their home province's residency is colloquially called an "interprovincial expat" as opposed to an "interprovincial migrant" who changes their residency and usually is intending to move permanently. For example British Columbia and Alberta allow each others residents to attend post secondary in the other province while retaining their home province's residency.[original research?]
In the 19th century, travel became easier by way ofsteamship ortrain. People could more readily choose to live for several years in a foreign country, or be sent there by employers. The table below aims to show significant examples of expatriate communities which have developed since that time:
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Group | Period | Country of origin | Destination | Host country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australians andNew Zealanders in London | 1960s-now | Australia/New Zealand | London | United Kingdom | |
Beat Generation | 1950s | United States | Tangier | Morocco | |
Beat Generation | 1960s | United States | Paris | France | SeeBeat Hotel. |
British retirees | 1970s–now | United Kingdom | Costa del Sol | Spain | Arguably immigrants if permanent. |
British retirees | current | United Kingdom | Dordogne | France | Arguably immigrants if permanent. |
British Raj | 1721–1949 | United Kingdom | India | Often referred to as "Anglo-Indians". | |
Celebrities and artists | 1800s–now | various | Lake Geneva | Switzerland | |
Digital nomads | 1990s–now | various | various | ||
Film-makers | 1910s–now | Europe | Los Angeles | United States | "Hollywood" |
Jet set | 1950s–1970s | various | various | ||
Lost Generation | 1920s–30s | United States | Paris | France | SeeA Moveable Feast. |
Modernist artists & writers | 1870s–1930s | various | French Riviera | France | |
Oligarchs | 1990s–current | Russia | London[24] | United Kingdom | |
Salarymen | current | Japan | various | SeeJapanese diaspora | |
Shanghai French Concession | 1849–1943 | France | Shanghai | China | |
Shanghai International Settlement | 1863–1945 | United Kingdom | Shanghai | China | Preceded byBritish Concession |
Shanghai International Settlement | 1863–1945 | United States | Shanghai | China | Preceded byAmerican Concession |
Tax exiles | 1860s(?)–now | various | Monte Carlo | Monaco | |
Third culture kids | current | various | various | Includes 'military brats' and 'diplobrats'. |
During the 1930s,Nazi Germany revoked the citizenship of many opponents, such asAlbert Einstein,Oskar Maria Graf,Willy Brandt andThomas Mann, often expatriating entire families.[25][26]
Students who study in another country are not referred to as expatriates.[27][28]
The number of expatriates in the world is difficult to determine, since there is no governmental census.[29] Market research company Finaccord estimated the number to be 66.2 million in 2017.[30]
In 2013, the United Nations estimated that 232 million people, or 3.2% of the world population, lived outside their home country.[citation needed]
As of 2019, according to theUnited Nations, the number of international migrants globally reached an estimated 272 million, or 3.5% of the world population.[31]
Somemultinational corporations send employees to foreign countries to work in branch offices or subsidiaries. Expatriate employees allow a parent company to more closely control its foreign subsidiaries. They can also improve global coordination.[32]
A 2007 study found the key drivers for expatriates to pursue internationalcareers were: breadth of responsibilities, nature of the international environment (risk and challenge), high levels ofautonomy of international posts, andcultural differences (rethinking old ways).[33]
However, expatriate professionals and independent expatriate hires are often more expensive than local employees. Expatriate salaries are usually augmented with allowances to compensate for a highercost of living or hardships associated with a foreign posting. Other expenses may need to be paid, such as health care, housing, or fees at aninternational school. There is also the cost of moving a family and their belongings. Another problem can be government restrictions in the foreign country.[34][35]
Spouses may have trouble adjusting due toculture shock, loss of their usual social network, interruptions to their own career, and helping children cope with a new school. These are chief reasons given for foreign assignments ending early.[36] However, a spouse can also act as a source of support for an expatriate professional.[37] Families with children help to bridge the language and culture aspect of the host and home country, while the spouse plays a critical role in balancing the families integration into the culture. Some corporations have begun to include spouses earlier when making decisions about a foreign posting, and offercoaching or adjustment training before a family departs.[38] Research suggests that tailoring pre-departure cross-cultural training and its specific relevance positively influence the fulfilment of expectations in expatriates' adjustment.[39] According to the 2012 Global Relocation Trends Survey Report, 88 per cent of spouses resist a proposed move. The most common reasons for refusing an assignment are family concerns and the spouse's career.[40][41]
Expatriate failure is a term which has been coined for an employee returning prematurely to their home country, or resigning. About 7% of expatriates return early, but this figure does not include those who perform poorly while on assignment or resign entirely from a company.[42] When asked the cost of a premature expatriate's return, a survey of 57 multinational companies reported an average cost of about US$225,000.[43]
People move abroad for many different reasons.[44] An understanding of what makes people move is the first step in the expatriation process. People could be ‘pushed’ away as a reaction to specific socio-economic or political conditions in the home country, or ‘pulled’ towards a destination country because of better work opportunities/conditions. The ‘pull’ can also include personal preferences, such as climate, a better quality of life, or the fact that family/friends are living there.[45][46]
For some people, moving abroad is a conscious, thoroughly planned decision, while for others it could be a ‘spur of the moment’, spontaneous decision. This decision, of course, is influenced by the individual's geographic,socioeconomic and political environment; as well as their personal circumstances. The motivation for moving (or staying) abroad also gets adjusted with the different life changes the person experiences – for example, if they get married, have children, etc. Also, different personalities (orpersonality types) have diverse reactions to the challenges of adjusting to a host-country culture; and these reactions affect their motivations to continue (or not) living abroad.[47][48][49]
In this era of international competition, it is important for companies, as well as for countries, to understand what is that motivates people to move to another country to work. Understanding expatriates' motivations for international mobility allows organisations to tailor work packages to match expatriates' expectations in order to attract and/or retain skilled workers from abroad.
Trends in recent years among business expatriates have included:
The Munich-based paid expatriate networking platformInterNations conducts a survey of expat opinions and trends on a regular basis.[64]
There has been an increase in scholarly research into the field in recent years. For instance,Emerald Group Publishing in 2013 launchedThe Journal of Global Mobility: The home of expatriate management research.[65]
S.K Canhilal and R.G. Shemueli suggest that successful expatriation is driven by a combination of individual, organizational, and context-related factors.[66] Of these factors, the most significant have been outlined as: cross-cultural competences, spousal support, motivational questions, time of assignment, emotional competences, previous international experience, language fluency, social relational skills, cultural differences, and organizational recruitment and selection process.[67]
Expatriate milieus have been the setting of many novels and short stories, often written by authors who spent years living abroad. The following is a list of notable works and authors, by approximate date of publication.
18th century :Persian Letters (French: Lettres persanes) is a literary work, published in 1721, byMontesquieu, relating the experiences of two fictional Persian noblemen, Usbek and Rica, who spend several years in France under Louis XIV and the Regency and who correspond with their respective friends staying at home.
19th century: American authorHenry James moved to Europe as a young man and many of his novels, such asThe Portrait of a Lady (1881),The Ambassadors (1903), andThe Wings of the Dove (1902), dealt with relationships between the New World and the Old. From the 1890s to 1920s, Polish-bornJoseph Conrad wrote a string of English-language novels drawing on his seagoing experiences in farflung colonies, includingHeart of Darkness (1899),Lord Jim (1900) andNostromo (1904).
1900s/1910s: German-American writerHerman George Scheffauer was active from 1900 to 1925. English writerW. Somerset Maugham, a former spy, set many short stories and novels overseas, such asThe Moon and Sixpence (1919) in which an English stockbroker flees to Tahiti to become an artist, andThe Razor's Edge (1944) in which a traumatised American pilot seeks meaning in France and India.Ford Madox Ford used spa towns in Europe as the setting for his novelThe Good Soldier (1915) about an American couple, a British couple, and their infidelities.
1920s:A Passage to India (1924), one of the best-known books byE.M. Forster, is set against the backdrop of the independence movement in India.Ernest Hemingway portrayed American men in peril abroad, beginning with hisdebut novel,The Sun Also Rises (1926).
1930s:Graham Greene was a keen traveller and another former spy, and from the 1930s to 1980s many of his novels and short stories dealt with Englishmen struggling to cope in exotic foreign places.Tender is the Night (1934), the last complete novel byF. Scott Fitzgerald, was about a glamorous American couple unravelling in the South of France.George Orwell drew heavily on his own experiences as a colonial policeman for his novelBurmese Days (1934).Evelyn Waugh satirised foreign correspondents inScoop (1938).
1940s: From the mid-1940s to the 1990s, American-bornPaul Bowles set many short stories and novels in his adopted home of Morocco, includingThe Sheltering Sky (1949).[68]Malcolm Lowry inUnder the Volcano (1947) told the tale of an alcoholic British consul in Mexico on the Day of the Dead.[69]
1950s: From the 1950s to the 1990s, American authorPatricia Highsmith set many of her psychological thrillers abroad, includingThe Talented Mr. Ripley (1955).James Baldwin's novelGiovanni's Room (1956) was about an American man having an affair in Paris with an Italian bartender.Anthony Burgess worked as a teacher in Malaya and made it the setting ofThe Malayan Trilogy (1956-1959).The Alexandria Quartet (1957-1960) was the best-known work ofLawrence Durrell, who was born in India to British parents and lived overseas for most of his life.
1960s: English writerPaul Scott is best known forThe Raj Quartet (1965-1975) dealing with the final years of the British Empire in India.John le Carré made use of overseas settings forThe Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963) and many of his subsequent novels about British spies.
1970s: InThe Year of Living Dangerously (1978),Christopher Koch portrayed the lead-up to a 1965 coup in Indonesia through the eyes of an Australian journalist and a British diplomat.A Cry in the Jungle Bar (1979) byRobert Drewe portrayed an Australian out of his depth while working for the UN in South-East Asia.
1990s: In bothCocaine Nights (1996) andSuper-Cannes (2000),J. G. Ballard's English protagonists uncover dark secrets in luxurious gated communities in the South of France.
2000s:Platform (2001) was French authorMichel Houellebecq's novel of European sex tourists in Thailand.Prague (2002) was a debut novel byArthur Phillips which dealt with Americans and Canadians in Hungary towards the end of the Cold War.Shantaram (2003) was a bestselling novel byGregory David Roberts about an Australian criminal who flees to India.
2010s: American novelistChris Pavone has set several thrillers overseas since his debutThe Expats (2012).Janice Y. K. Lee inThe Expatriates (2016) andthe miniseries deals with Americans in Hong Kong.Tom Rachman in his debut novelThe Imperfectionists (2010) wrote of journalists working for an English-language newspaper in Rome.[70]
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Memoirs of expatriate life can be considered a form oftravel literature with an extended stay in the host country. Some of the more notable examples are listed here in order of their publication date, and recount experiences of roughly the same decade unless noted otherwise.
Medieval: InThe Travels of Marco Polo (c. 1300),Rustichello da Pisa recounted the tales of Italian merchantMarco Polo about journeying theSilk Road to China.
1930s-1960s: In the first half ofDown and Out in Paris and London (1933),George Orwell described a life of low-paid squalor while working in the kitchens of Parisian restaurants. InThe America That I Have Seen (1949), Egyptian IslamistSayyid Qutb denounced the United States after studying there. InMy Family and Other Animals (1956) and its sequels,Gerald Durrell described growing up as the budding naturalist in an eccentric English family on the Greek island ofCorfu during the late 1930s. InAs I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning (1969),Laurie Lee told of busking and tramping in his youth across 1930s Spain.
1970s-1990s: InIt's Me, Eddie (1979),Eduard Limonov discusses his time as a Soviet expatriate living in New York City in the 1970s, including his poor work experiences, political disillusionment, and sexual experiences. InLetters from Hollywood (1986),Michael Moorcock corresponded with a friend about the life of an English writer in Los Angeles. InA Year in Provence (1989),Peter Mayle and his English family adapt to life in Southern France while renovating an old farmhouse. InNotes from a Small Island (1995), American writerBill Bryson described a farewell tour of Britain.
2000s: InA Year in the Merde (2004) English bachelorStephen Clarke recounted comic escapades while working in Paris. InEat, Pray, Love (2006), divorced AmericanElizabeth Gilbert searched for meaning in Italy, India and Indonesia. In the early chapters ofMiracles of Life (2008),J. G. Ballard told of his childhood and early adolescence in Shanghai during the 1930s and 1940s.
Films about expatriates often deal with issues ofculture shock. They include dramas, comedies, thrillers, action/adventure films and romances. Examples, grouped by host country, include:
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Reality television has dealt with overseas real estate (House Hunters International andA Place in the Sun), wealthy Russians in London (Meet the Russians), British expat couples (No Going Back) and mismanaged restaurants (Ramsay's Costa del Nightmares).
The final decades of the British Raj have been portrayed in dramas (The Jewel in the Crown andIndian Summers). Diplomats on a foreign posting have been the basis for drama (Embassy), documentary (The Embassy) and comedy (Ambassadors). British writers in Hollywood have been the subject of comedy (Episodes). Other settings include British doctors in contemporary India (The Good Karma Hospital) and a series of British detectives posted to an idyllic Caribbean island (Death in Paradise).