外派经历的阴暗面:中国外派人员在坦桑尼亚遭遇小腐败的体验

Exploring one of the darker sides of expatriation: Chinese expatriates' experiences with petty corruption in Tanzania

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS REVIEW · 2025
被引 0
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

基于民族志研究,探讨制度压力与个人资本(语言、文化、社会资本)如何共同影响中国外派人员在坦桑尼亚应对小腐败的行为,揭示外派人员如何利用个人资本来顺从或抵制腐败。

Abstract

Drawing on institutional isomorphism and Bourdieu’s concept of capital, this ethnographic study provides a comprehensive examination of how institutional pressures interact with individual capital (linguistic, cultural and social) to shape expatriates’ behaviours in dealing with local petty corruption practices. We find that coercive isomorphism is often intensified by a lack of local linguistic capital, mimetic isomorphism is reinforced by uncertainty in a foreign environment, and normative isomorphism is shaped by norms and expectations originating from both the host and home countries, rather than being solely rooted in the local environment. Our findings highlight the critical role of individual capital as a moderator of institutional responses. By bridging macro-level neo-institutional theory and micro-level practices, this study deepens our understanding of how expatriates’ behaviour is shaped by both broader institutional environments and the personal resources they bring to their host country. • Explores petty corruption through institutional isomorphism and Bourdieu's capital. • Reveals how expatriates’ capital shapes compliance and resistance to corruption • Shows coercive, mimetic, and normative pressures influencing expatriate behaviour. • Identifies linguistic, cultural capital and social capital as tools to navigate corrupt encounters. • Highlights transnational roots of normative isomorphism in global corruption contexts.

国际商务组织行为学腐败研究制度理论