Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design

Taking the case of defining “talent,” a term that has been widely used but its definitions differ by discipline, organization, policy sector, as well as over time, we demonstrate how the basic definition of a policy subject may affect policy design and the assessment of policy outcomes. We review ho...

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Main Authors: Cerna, Lucie, Chou, Meng‐Hsuan
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144536
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1445362023-03-05T15:33:37Z Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design Cerna, Lucie Chou, Meng‐Hsuan School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Political science Migration Talent Taking the case of defining “talent,” a term that has been widely used but its definitions differ by discipline, organization, policy sector, as well as over time, we demonstrate how the basic definition of a policy subject may affect policy design and the assessment of policy outcomes. We review how “talent” is defined in two sets of literature, talent management and migration studies, and find that definitions fall under one of two categories: binary (“talent” as qualities) or composite (“talent” as a relational concept). The implications of our findings are epistemological and ontological; the findings point to diverse epistemological effects of definitions through developments of indicators, as expected, and they also reveal the policy designers’ ontological starting points. Ontological perspectives are significant because they ultimately determine whether the policy assessments carried out differ in degrees or in kind. In the case of defining “talent,” this means determining which objectives the designers would set (e.g., recruiting vs. cultivating vs. introducing competition), the policy instrumentation for achieving the goals (migration measures vs. education vs. lifelong learning vs. human resource policy), and the type of assessment for measuring policy outcomes (single vs. multiple indicators, qualitative vs. quantitative). Accepted version 2020-11-11T07:16:23Z 2020-11-11T07:16:23Z 2019 Journal Article Cerna, L., & Chou, M.-H. (2019). Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design. Policy Studies Journal, 47(3), 819-848. doi:10.1111/psj.12294 0190-292X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144536 10.1111/psj.12294 3 47 819 848 en Policy Studies Journal © 2018 Policy Studies Organization. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Wiley in Policy Studies Journal and is made available with permission of Policy Studies Organization. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Political science
Migration
Talent
spellingShingle Social sciences::Political science
Migration
Talent
Cerna, Lucie
Chou, Meng‐Hsuan
Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design
description Taking the case of defining “talent,” a term that has been widely used but its definitions differ by discipline, organization, policy sector, as well as over time, we demonstrate how the basic definition of a policy subject may affect policy design and the assessment of policy outcomes. We review how “talent” is defined in two sets of literature, talent management and migration studies, and find that definitions fall under one of two categories: binary (“talent” as qualities) or composite (“talent” as a relational concept). The implications of our findings are epistemological and ontological; the findings point to diverse epistemological effects of definitions through developments of indicators, as expected, and they also reveal the policy designers’ ontological starting points. Ontological perspectives are significant because they ultimately determine whether the policy assessments carried out differ in degrees or in kind. In the case of defining “talent,” this means determining which objectives the designers would set (e.g., recruiting vs. cultivating vs. introducing competition), the policy instrumentation for achieving the goals (migration measures vs. education vs. lifelong learning vs. human resource policy), and the type of assessment for measuring policy outcomes (single vs. multiple indicators, qualitative vs. quantitative).
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Cerna, Lucie
Chou, Meng‐Hsuan
format Article
author Cerna, Lucie
Chou, Meng‐Hsuan
author_sort Cerna, Lucie
title Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design
title_short Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design
title_full Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design
title_fullStr Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design
title_full_unstemmed Defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design
title_sort defining “talent” : insights from management and migration literatures for policy design
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144536
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