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Inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities: a study of Black migrant women in South Africa

This study aimed to explore the inclusion challenges faced by highly educated, documented, professional Black migrant women in a Black-majority context, analysing the impact of their identities on inclusion across institutional, organisational, and social levels. While much research on migrant women...

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Main Author: Velentza, Eleana
Other Authors: Dharani, Babar
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2026
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Velentza, Eleana
author2 Dharani, Babar
author_browse Dharani, Babar
Velentza, Eleana
author_facet Dharani, Babar
Velentza, Eleana
author_sort Velentza, Eleana
collection Thesis
description This study aimed to explore the inclusion challenges faced by highly educated, documented, professional Black migrant women in a Black-majority context, analysing the impact of their identities on inclusion across institutional, organisational, and social levels. While much research on migrant women has been conducted in Western contexts, little is known about how highly educated Black migrant women experience inclusion in African settings. Grounded in intersectionality theory (Crenshaw), identity theory, and social identity theory, the research examined how inclusion challenges emerge at the intersection of gender, race, and migration status. The main research question that guided this study was: How do inclusion challenges emerge at the intersection of marginalised identities of Black migrant women in a Black majority setting? Twenty-three highly educated professional Black migrant women, selected through purposeful and snowball sampling, participated in the study, which employed a qualitative, inductive, hermeneutic phenomenological methodology, utilising semi-structured interviews. The primary study findings revealed that gender, race, and migration status intersect in multiple ways, producing both inclusionary and exclusionary experiences. Meaningful inclusion requires engagement with processes operating at individual, organisational, and institutional levels. The contextual relevance of South Africa reinforces the salience of these identities, which are shaped by the interplay of social categorisation, self-identification, and differentiation. This interplay predisposes Black migrant women to institutionalised xenophobia, gendered and racial exclusion, and persistent othering. By investigating the strategic deployment of agentic identities in decentring otherness and marginalisation, the study develops a multi-layered intersectional identity framework that integrates individual, organisational, and institutional dimensions. The research advances intersectionality theory by introducing newly formed identities in response to institutional and societal exclusions, while also emphasising the need for nuanced approaches to inclusion. The findings underscore the urgency of robust intersectional institutional policies, structural reforms in organisations and institutions, and reworking notions of “otherness” within and beyond the workplace, offering significant contributions to both theory and practice.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:33.643Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42792 Inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities: a study of Black migrant women in South Africa Velentza, Eleana Dharani, Babar Black migrant Women South Africa This study aimed to explore the inclusion challenges faced by highly educated, documented, professional Black migrant women in a Black-majority context, analysing the impact of their identities on inclusion across institutional, organisational, and social levels. While much research on migrant women has been conducted in Western contexts, little is known about how highly educated Black migrant women experience inclusion in African settings. Grounded in intersectionality theory (Crenshaw), identity theory, and social identity theory, the research examined how inclusion challenges emerge at the intersection of gender, race, and migration status. The main research question that guided this study was: How do inclusion challenges emerge at the intersection of marginalised identities of Black migrant women in a Black majority setting? Twenty-three highly educated professional Black migrant women, selected through purposeful and snowball sampling, participated in the study, which employed a qualitative, inductive, hermeneutic phenomenological methodology, utilising semi-structured interviews. The primary study findings revealed that gender, race, and migration status intersect in multiple ways, producing both inclusionary and exclusionary experiences. Meaningful inclusion requires engagement with processes operating at individual, organisational, and institutional levels. The contextual relevance of South Africa reinforces the salience of these identities, which are shaped by the interplay of social categorisation, self-identification, and differentiation. This interplay predisposes Black migrant women to institutionalised xenophobia, gendered and racial exclusion, and persistent othering. By investigating the strategic deployment of agentic identities in decentring otherness and marginalisation, the study develops a multi-layered intersectional identity framework that integrates individual, organisational, and institutional dimensions. The research advances intersectionality theory by introducing newly formed identities in response to institutional and societal exclusions, while also emphasising the need for nuanced approaches to inclusion. The findings underscore the urgency of robust intersectional institutional policies, structural reforms in organisations and institutions, and reworking notions of “otherness” within and beyond the workplace, offering significant contributions to both theory and practice. 2026-01-30T12:30:28Z 2026-01-30T12:30:28Z 2025 2026-01-30T12:28:37Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42792 en eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Black migrant
Women
South Africa
Velentza, Eleana
Inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities: a study of Black migrant women in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities: a study of Black migrant women in South Africa
title_full Inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities: a study of Black migrant women in South Africa
title_fullStr Inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities: a study of Black migrant women in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities: a study of Black migrant women in South Africa
title_short Inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities: a study of Black migrant women in South Africa
title_sort inclusion challenges at the intersection of marginalized identities a study of black migrant women in south africa
topic Black migrant
Women
South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42792
work_keys_str_mv AT velentzaeleana inclusionchallengesattheintersectionofmarginalizedidentitiesastudyofblackmigrantwomeninsouthafrica