Citizenship as a moderator of social capital: knowledge hoarding in expatriate-dominated workplaces
Document Type
Article
Source of Publication
International Journal of Organizational Analysis
Publication Date
12-15-2025
Abstract
Purpose – This study aims to examine how national citizenship functions as an axis of power, shaping knowledge-sharing behaviours and social capital formation in the expatriate-dominated private sector of the United Arab Emirates. It focusses on the underexplored role of citizenship in knowledge hoarding, showing how such practices contribute to the organisational exclusion of Emirati nationals. Design/methodology/approach – A qualitative, narrative methodology was used to capture Emirati employees’ lived experiences in public sector companies. Sixteen semi-structured interviews were analysed through the lens of social capital theory and its structural, relational and cognitive dimensions to interpret how knowledge flows align with citizenship and organisational belonging. Findings – Expatriate employees, perceiving localisation as a threat to job security and workplace territoriality, engaged in strategic knowledge hoarding. This behaviour limited Emiratis’ access to networks and tacit knowledge, inhibited trust-building and curtailed workplace integration. National citizenship thus emerges as a decisive moderator of social capital in multinational workforces, shaping both inclusion and exclusion. Research limitations/implications – National citizenship is identified as an enabler or inhibitor of social capital, prompting further research into how institutional markers of identity impact knowledge flows in multinational workplaces. Practical implications – Findings highlight the need for managerial strategies that dismantle gatekeeping and promote inclusive knowledge-sharing, including mentoring schemes, transparent knowledge systems and cross-cultural training, to ensure the success of localisation policies. Originality/value – This paper advances social capital theory by positioning national citizenship as a critical moderator, a dimension largely neglected in existing research. It contributes a novel perspective on knowledge withholding as a form of structural privilege, extending debates on workforce localisation, diversity and global mobility.
DOI Link
ISSN
Publisher
Emerald
Volume
33
Issue
12
First Page
301
Last Page
312
Disciplines
Business
Keywords
Expatriate-local dynamics, Knowledge hoarding, Organisational power asymmetries, Social capital theory, United Arab Emirates, Workforce localisation
Scopus ID
Recommended Citation
Goby, Valerie Priscilla, "Citizenship as a moderator of social capital: knowledge hoarding in expatriate-dominated workplaces" (2025). All Works. 7805.
https://zuscholars.zu.ac.ae/works/7805
Indexed in Scopus
yes
Open Access
no