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Autori principali: Wang, Yi, Yue, Yang, Wang, Wei, Zhang, Gaowei
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.06437
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author Wang, Yi
Yue, Yang
Wang, Wei
Zhang, Gaowei
author_facet Wang, Yi
Yue, Yang
Wang, Wei
Zhang, Gaowei
contents Globally distributed software development has been a mainstream paradigm in developing modern software systems. We have witnessed a fast-growing population of software developers from areas where English is not a native language in the last several decades. Given that English is still the de facto working language in most global software engineering teams, we need to gain more knowledge about the experiences of developers who are non-native English speakers. We conducted an empirical study to fill this research gap. In this study, we interviewed 27 Chinese developers in commercial software development and open source global software development teams and applied Bourdieu's capital-field-habitus framework in an abductive data analysis process. Our study reveals four types of capital (language, social, symbolic, and economic) involved in their experiences and examines the interrelations among them. We found that non-native speakers' insufficient language capital played an essential role in prohibiting them from accessing and accumulating other capital, thus reproducing the sustained and systematic disadvantaged positions of non-native English speakers in GSD teams. We further discussed the theoretical and practical implications of the study.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_06437
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Uncovering Non-native Speakers' Experiences in Global Software Development Teams -- A Bourdieusian Perspective
Wang, Yi
Yue, Yang
Wang, Wei
Zhang, Gaowei
Software Engineering
Globally distributed software development has been a mainstream paradigm in developing modern software systems. We have witnessed a fast-growing population of software developers from areas where English is not a native language in the last several decades. Given that English is still the de facto working language in most global software engineering teams, we need to gain more knowledge about the experiences of developers who are non-native English speakers. We conducted an empirical study to fill this research gap. In this study, we interviewed 27 Chinese developers in commercial software development and open source global software development teams and applied Bourdieu's capital-field-habitus framework in an abductive data analysis process. Our study reveals four types of capital (language, social, symbolic, and economic) involved in their experiences and examines the interrelations among them. We found that non-native speakers' insufficient language capital played an essential role in prohibiting them from accessing and accumulating other capital, thus reproducing the sustained and systematic disadvantaged positions of non-native English speakers in GSD teams. We further discussed the theoretical and practical implications of the study.
title Uncovering Non-native Speakers' Experiences in Global Software Development Teams -- A Bourdieusian Perspective
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.06437