“I only wanted one thing and that was to be who I am now”: Being a trans young adult and (re)negotiating vocational identity

Author:

Corlett Sara12ORCID,Stutterheim Sarah E.2ORCID,Whiley Lilith A.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social Psychology Faculty of Psychology Universidad de Sevilla Sevilla Spain

2. Department of Health Promotion & Care and Public Health Institute Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences Maastricht University Maastricht The Netherlands

3. Department of Management University of Sussex Business School University of Sussex Brighton UK

Abstract

AbstractDeveloping vocational identity as a young adult is a complex feat and may be even more so for transgender people, who have to navigate their professional selves in a largely cisgender and heteronormative world that minoritizes them. This qualitative study explores how transgender youths develop a vocational identity. Through 10 in‐depth interviews in the Netherlands and Belgium, we found that participants had to negotiate favoring education (at the expense of gender transition) or sensemaking their gender identity (at the expense of schooling), while seeking to avoid discrimination. In addition, we observed that transitioning was also an enabling process, facilitating the development of trans young adults' vocational identity. We also found that trans young adults see the (un)attainability of career paths related to anticipated stigmatization and other expectations related to their trans identities. In particular, they mentioned occupations where hegemonic masculinity and gender binarism are praised, while those involving interaction with children and teenagers are not attainable. Organizations celebrating their trans identity and career paths in which the living conditions of other minoritized people are improved were perceived as attainable and desirable. The insights presented here show that even in countries that are considered “progressive” in terms of LGBTQ+ rights, the vocational identity of trans youth is nevertheless influenced by (and at times constrained by) their gender identity. The need for career counselors, educational institutions, and organizations to work on facilitating the future career development of trans individuals and their access to inclusive spaces is discussed.

Funder

Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Gender Studies

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