The barrage of new technologies that are introduced to the market, each with the promise of altering (or at least affecting) the corporate world, can easily make one numb. However, our examination of a few of the more important IT trends makes a strong argument for the fact that something important is taking place. Granularity, speed, and scale—the three key elements that have characterized the digital era—are typically being accelerated by these technological advancements. However, the extent of these shifts in bandwidth, computer power, and analytical complexity is what's creating new opportunities for organizations, inventions, and business models. Greater innovation may be made possible by the exponential gains in processing power and network speeds brought about by the cloud and 5G, for instance. Advances in the metaverse of augmented and virtual reality provide opportunities for immersive learning and virtual R&D using digital twins, for example. Technological development
The qual findings totally spill the tea on how migrant farm workers vibe with their jobs and the whole social and cultural transition thing.
The findings also spill the tea on the mad complicated and lit relationships between different peeps like migrants, public service providers, and employers. The tea found from the investigation is all about how migrant farm workers are treated and what they go through in their everyday lives while going through the process of social and cultural transitions. It's all about how their experiences relate to the key vibes in today's equality and cultural capital literature. The qual info also ID's the challenges employers, reps from pub, priv, and vol sectors face in responding to migrants' needs, incl. in the delivery of diff initiatives around employment, equality, community vibes, and integration.
OMG, research has like totally shown that Scotland's local job scenes in rural areas still depend on migrant workers from A8 countries (Bell et al., 2004, de Lima et al., 2005, One of the most lit claims that probs have mad effects on migrants' social and cultural transitions in the long run is a claim for real equality. I've like totally argued in Chapter 2 that the whole cultural capital thing, ya know, the equality claim, is all about getting that real equality when there's like major differences in people's resources, well-being, and recognition. Substantive equality be like, it's all about giving everyone a fair shot and making sure there ain't no unfairness in how we distribute the goods and recognize cultural capital, you know? No differences between the majority and minority peeps.Migrant farm workers in Scotland were like totally doing unskilled gigs in the agri/horti scene, even though they had mad qualifications and legit cultural clout. They didn't even have to flex their fitness to snag those low-key gigs on Scottish farms, even though they're way overqualified, skilled, and experienced for the job. Some of them flexed their degrees from uni, college, or poly.
Some peeps graduated in ag and farming while others were out there hustlin' for career glow up in different fields and gigs.
Periodt. Research has like totally shown that migrant workers are mainly recruited for the gross jobs (Anderson et al. 2006, CAB, 2005, de Lima and Wright, 2009; Stalker, 2008), they're put in like lower positions in the economy, they get paid unfair low wages (Hoggart and Mendoza, 1999) and they have to deal with inequalities and barriers to getting jobs that use their cultural capital. OMG, there's like proof that peeps be using cheap migrant workers (Hill, 2010) cuz they can easily get hired for low-skilled jobs that are like super tough and dirty, even though they have more qualifications (de Lima and Wright, 2009: 395). These developments are lowkey causing mad challenges for the field of equality and cultural capital, fam. These challenges be like, do migrant workers get exploited 'cause of stigmatization or do they get treated with equality and their cultural capital gets acknowledged? They also lowkey add to a bunch of claims to be flexed by farm migrants. This chapter gonna spill the tea on how the qualitative findings and info relate to the theoretical framework / original questions / theories and what the most important implication is of such findings. Yo, this chapter is all about spilling the tea on bigger stories and giving you the bigger picture. It's all about diving deep into the unique vibes of the farm migrant experience, you feel me? I'm talking about when people flex their cultural capital and talk about equality, but I'm using different perspectives to understand what equality of cultural capital really means. It's like, people always assume that if you try to like, seriously mess with immigrants, it's gonna have a major impact on not just the economy, but also on stuff like fairness, togetherness, and fitting in. In order to flex on the tea about the possible connection between immigration, equality, and cultural capital that I've been spilling, like if we don't actively make sure everyone gets the same cultural clout, it's gonna cause more demands for equality, ya feel? So I had to pick some peeps to interview and listen to their personal stories to confirm my theories. But, like, the migrant peeps in this study were all like:
A NFU rep was like:
Migrants' intentions when it comes to dipping or flexing British citizenship are hella vague, fam. Many Eastern European workers, like, especially Polish peeps, are totally down to bounce back to their crib 'cause the vibes in their homeland are getting lit. It seems like they would find this situation to British citizenship hella unattractive. Others would be totally vibin' on the mad perks of citizenship, ya know? Like, everyone gets to flex the same rights as a British citizen. It's lit! If they wanna snatch our nationality as a vibe of equality, they gotta get a better grasp of our language and our whole vibe, ya know? A CAB official spilled the tea: Our democra-slay citizenship can be, like, a major flex for those seeking to be treated with equality. Yas queen! Citizen's rights here in the UK be hella obvious, ya know? Citizenship be giving everyone, even migrants tryna be British citizens, the same lit rights and freedoms. A migrant who's down to take our nationality gotta have mad practical knowledge about our life, language, and country to flex that equality of cultural capital.
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