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Translating human capital amid varying intentions to stay: An integrative conceptual review of the immigrant employment attainment process
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Translating human capital amid varying intentions to stay: An integrative conceptual review of the immigrant employment attainment process

Snehal Hora, Emily D Campion, Sima Sajjadiani and Diana Lee
Journal of applied psychology
02/12/2026
DOI: 10.1037/apl0001343
PMID: 41678233

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Abstract

Immigrants face a unique challenge in translating their home country human capital to secure employment in their host country's labor market, potentially leading to underemployment. In this integrative conceptual review, we formalize a framework to explain the process of human capital translation for immigrants, specifically laborers and professionals. Synthesizing findings across disciplines, we explicitly model and consider the theoretical role of , which refers to the amount of time an immigrant desires to stay in their host country. We derive this notion from socioemotional selectivity theory to theorize that an immigrant's intended duration of stay influences proximal social goals central to human capital translation, and in turn, employment speed (i.e., how quickly they attain a job) and quality (i.e., the extent to which the job aligns with their knowledge, skills, and abilities). We contribute to scholarship by (a) enhancing the conceptual accessibility and precision of the "immigrant" construct for future organizational psychology and management scholarship; (b) synthesizing and integrating multidisciplinary literature on the labor and professional immigrants' employment attainment process to advance a foundational framework that explains human capital translation and how underemployment may occur for these immigrants; and (c) generating a future research agenda and delineating practical implications for practitioners. We also develop and showcase a novel approach for using supervised machine learning, unsupervised machine learning, and large language models to conduct high quality, multidisciplinary systematic reviews more efficiently. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2026 APA, all rights reserved).
Machine Learning immigrant socioemotional selectivity theory human capital large language models

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