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Canvass ceiling as fresh neologism

[edit]

I just now relocated the current treatment of "canvass ceiling" to the talk page for discussion.

embedded

Canvas ceiling denotes the multi-level, multi-faceted challenges that refugees face in their search for sustainable employment.

as independent section

=== Canvas ceiling ===

File:Ijmr12222-fig-0001-m.jpg
Canvas Ceiling - Factors influencing refugee workforce integration[1]

Canvas ceiling[2] is a metaphor used to capture a multitude of barriers affecting refugee workforce integration (cf. glass ceiling and bamboo ceiling). The notion of the ceiling is used to illuminate the limits that a particular social group encounters in their career journey. Canvas ceiling encompasses institutional-, organizational- and individual-level challenges that refugees encounter in accessing and advancing quality employment within the receiving society. Refugee workforce integration is especially difficult to facilitate due to the interplay of various factors across multiple levels (i.e. institutional, organizational and individual-level factors). That is, refugees experience interrelated effects of compound challenges that they must overcome in order to achieve adequately remunerated and commensurate employment with prospects for professional advancement. These challenges span around: immigration regulations, qualifications accreditation and education, socio-political climate, employers, self-employment related issues, support organizations' operations and management, individual demographics, language, social networks, psychological responses, and motivation of individual refugees.[2]

References

  1. ^ Lee, Eun Su; Szkudlarek, Betina; Nguyen, Duc Cuong; Nardon, Luciara (2020). "Unveiling the Canvas Ceiling : A Multidisciplinary Literature Review of Refugee Employment and Workforce Integration". International Journal of Management Reviews. 22 (2): 193–216. doi:10.1111/ijmr.12222. ISSN 1460-8545.
  2. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference :3 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Gah! The undefined :3 citation above is a duplicate of the Lee citation that already displays. (Not due to me.)

Problem

The problem here is that the sole citation (recent) is introducing this terminology, and it doesn't appear to have caught much traction anywhere else on a quick Google search. This is basically a fresh neologism supported by a single citation.

I really don't think Wikipedia needs to be in the Baskin-Robbins ceiling business, unless those "ceilings" are well established in common lingo.

Any other opinions? — MaxEnt 20:57, 19 May 2021 (UTC) See also Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Canvas ceiling. DMacks (talk) 10:48, 11 October 2021 (UTC)[reply]


Historical content

Much of the content of the original Canvas ceiling page, (last revision prior to the redirect), appears to never even been included here, including numerous references. I’m not advocating anything specific, just linking to that content for the sake of future editors. Jim Grisham (talk) 15:51, 31 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]