Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants in Canada
View through CrossRef
PurposeStudies on the information behaviour of immigrants including refugees across the globe show a significant dependency of immigrants on their informal networks for meeting various settlement and everyday life information needs. Although there are quite a few studies in LIS that globally report the dependency of immigrants on their personal networks, very little is known about their experiences with their informal personal networks in the contexts of their settlement in informational terms. This paper explores the information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants in Canada consulting informal networks including broader Bangladeshi community people in pre- and post-arrival contexts.Design/methodology/approachThe study uses a mixed-method approach including semi-structured interviews (n = 60) and surveys (n = 205) with Bangladeshi immigrants who arrived in Canada between the years of 1971 and 2017. Interview data were analysed thematically, and descriptive statistics are used to describe the survey data relevant to this study.FindingsAlthough the overall scope of the original study is much larger, this paper features findings on the information experience derived from an analysis of the interview data with some relevant references to the survey data when deemed appropriate. This paper provides insights into the information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants within their personal networks, including friends, family and ethnic community people. The findings of this study show that participants sometimes received discouraging, unhelpful or wrong information from their personal networks. The multiple dimensions of the information experiences of the study participants show the many consequences for their settlement lives. For some participants, settlement was particularly impacted by the concept of “information sharing fear” that emerged from the interviews. Information sharing fear relates to concerns that sharing information about the challenges faced by newcomers could be considered by potential immigrants as a kind of active “discouragement”. Participants described being sensitive to charges of envy or jealousy when they shared information related to challenges newcomers face, as friends and family see them as trying to prevent competition for social status.Originality/valueThe findings related to the information experiences of immigrants consulting informal networks has potential implications for research in various discipline such as LIS, migrational studies and psychology that explore the benefits of social networks in newcomers' settlement. The study also sets a ground to take a more holistic approach to the information experiences of newcomers, not just naming the sources newcomers utilize in settlement and everyday life contexts. The study also provides some future directions to comprehensively understand the culturally situated information behaviour of various immigrant groups.
Title: Information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants in Canada
Description:
PurposeStudies on the information behaviour of immigrants including refugees across the globe show a significant dependency of immigrants on their informal networks for meeting various settlement and everyday life information needs.
Although there are quite a few studies in LIS that globally report the dependency of immigrants on their personal networks, very little is known about their experiences with their informal personal networks in the contexts of their settlement in informational terms.
This paper explores the information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants in Canada consulting informal networks including broader Bangladeshi community people in pre- and post-arrival contexts.
Design/methodology/approachThe study uses a mixed-method approach including semi-structured interviews (n = 60) and surveys (n = 205) with Bangladeshi immigrants who arrived in Canada between the years of 1971 and 2017.
Interview data were analysed thematically, and descriptive statistics are used to describe the survey data relevant to this study.
FindingsAlthough the overall scope of the original study is much larger, this paper features findings on the information experience derived from an analysis of the interview data with some relevant references to the survey data when deemed appropriate.
This paper provides insights into the information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants within their personal networks, including friends, family and ethnic community people.
The findings of this study show that participants sometimes received discouraging, unhelpful or wrong information from their personal networks.
The multiple dimensions of the information experiences of the study participants show the many consequences for their settlement lives.
For some participants, settlement was particularly impacted by the concept of “information sharing fear” that emerged from the interviews.
Information sharing fear relates to concerns that sharing information about the challenges faced by newcomers could be considered by potential immigrants as a kind of active “discouragement”.
Participants described being sensitive to charges of envy or jealousy when they shared information related to challenges newcomers face, as friends and family see them as trying to prevent competition for social status.
Originality/valueThe findings related to the information experiences of immigrants consulting informal networks has potential implications for research in various discipline such as LIS, migrational studies and psychology that explore the benefits of social networks in newcomers' settlement.
The study also sets a ground to take a more holistic approach to the information experiences of newcomers, not just naming the sources newcomers utilize in settlement and everyday life contexts.
The study also provides some future directions to comprehensively understand the culturally situated information behaviour of various immigrant groups.
Related Results
Assessment of Immigrants’ Premium and Tax Payments for Health Care and the Costs of Their Care
Assessment of Immigrants’ Premium and Tax Payments for Health Care and the Costs of Their Care
ImportanceSome worry that immigrants burden the US economy and particularly the health care system. However, no analyses to date have assessed whether immigrants’ payments for prem...
Immigrants’ Citizenship Perceptions
Immigrants’ Citizenship Perceptions
Adopting a transnational lens, Immigrants’ Citizenship Perceptions: Sri Lankans in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand investigates Sri Lankan immigrants’ complex views towards thei...
Employment-Related Information Experiences of Bangladeshi Immigrants in New York City
Employment-Related Information Experiences of Bangladeshi Immigrants in New York City
This paper reports some key findings from a recent study on the employment-related information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants to New York City. Using semi-structured intervi...
Linking the westernised oropharyngeal microbiome to the immune response in Chinese immigrants
Linking the westernised oropharyngeal microbiome to the immune response in Chinese immigrants
Abstract
Background: Human microbiota plays a fundamental role in modulating the immune response. Western environment and lifestyle are envisaged to alter the human microbi...
Linking the westernised oropharyngeal microbiome to the immune response in Chinese immigrants
Linking the westernised oropharyngeal microbiome to the immune response in Chinese immigrants
Abstract
Background: Human microbiota plays a fundamental role in modulating the immune response, and these microbiota are associated with Western environment and lifestyle...
Patient-Identified Solutions to Primary Care Access Barriers in Canada: The Viewpoints of Nepalese Immigrant Community Members
Patient-Identified Solutions to Primary Care Access Barriers in Canada: The Viewpoints of Nepalese Immigrant Community Members
Background: Accessing healthcare for immigrants in Canada is complicated by many difficulties. With the continued and upward trend of immigration to Canada, it is crucial to identi...
Prospects For The Canadian Petroleum Industry
Prospects For The Canadian Petroleum Industry
Introduction
In contrast with the recession occurring in the U.S. oil and gas industry, and in contrast with the caution observed by investors in other parts of t...
High-skilled female immigrants: career strategies and experiences
High-skilled female immigrants: career strategies and experiences
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to uncover career-related issues that high-skilled female immigrants face and their strategies for rebuilding their careers upon migration for ...

