Accompanying Partners of International Students: Reflections on Three Issues

Dan Cui
, Nancy Arthur
, Jose Domene

Abstract

This paper reviews and critiques the existing literature on accompanying partners of international students (APIS), who are often an ignored population in programs and services for the internationalization of Canadian higher education. Particularly, we identify three issues. First, we argue that current research on this group overwhelmingly focuses on their social and cultural adaptation difficulties while ignoring their agency in dealing with life challenges in the host society. Second, we note that research on this population should go beyond an overemphasis on gender, to include a comprehensive analysis of how gender intersects with other unequal social relations, such as race and class, in contributing to the complexity and multiplicity of their lived experiences. Finally, we suggest that rather than conflating APIS with trailing partners of expatriates or immigrants and treating them as a homogenous group, researchers should do more to address their heterogeneity from an anti-essentialist approach.

 

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Published

2017-04-27



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Articles



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How to Cite

Cui, D., Arthur, N., & Domene, J. (2017). Accompanying Partners of International Students: Reflections on Three Issues. Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 47(1), 171–190. https://doi.org/10.47678/cjhe.v47i1.186193