Replication material for: “Chronicles of involuntary career changes: A longitudinal qualitative analysis.”

Replication material for: “Chronicles of involuntary career changes: A longitudinal qualitative analysis.”

Authors

Caroline Eliane Brazier (-Frésard) (Université de Lausanne, Institut de Psychologie, Centre de recherche en psychologie de l’orientation (CEPCO), Suisse )
Prof. Jonas Masdonati (Université de Lausanne, Institut de Psychologie, Centre de recherche en psychologie de l’orientation (CEPCO), Suisse )
Prof. Michaël Parmentier (Université de Liège, Management School., Belgique)

Publication year

2025

How to cite

Brazier, C. É., Masdonati J. & Parmentier, M. (2025). Replication material for: Chronicles of involuntary career changes: A longitudinal qualitative analysis. FORS - Swiss Centre of Expertise in the Social Sciences. https://doi.org/10.25597/neg8-ej82

Publisher

FORS - Swiss Centre of Expertise in the Social Sciences

Abstract

Although extensive research on career transitions exists, little is known about the challenges and processes of involuntary career change. Building on Savickas’s theoretical framework of objective and subjective careers, we investigated the subjective experiences of involuntary career changes while apprehending their objective unfolding. Following a longitudinal qualitative design, we conducted two waves of semistructured interviews with 18 participants who had been forced to change careers due to health issues, migration, or saturated labor market in Switzerland. A four-step temporal thematic analysis covering case description, case comparison, case processes analysis, and processes comparison highlighted a spectrum of career change processes. At one end, individuals experienced synchronous progressions and regained meaning and control over their career combined with a rather linear status sequence. Conversely, some individuals underwent asynchronous developments consisting of either modest objective steps that instigated meaningful subjective experiences or status stagnation, leading to a loss of control and meaning. These findings underscore the variety of involuntary career change processes and unveil synchronicity as a key temporal element in involuntary career change processes. Implications for research and practice are discussed.

Keywords

involuntary career change
career transition
subjective career
qualitative longitudinal research
synchronicity

Description of the material

PDF: Codebook - Qualitative thematic tree, with 33 codes and selected excerpts illustrating them (F)
PDF: Readme for Codebook & Bibliography (F)

Geolocation

French-speaking part of Switzerland

Publication

No. 16