Bonus point if you’ve moved to a different country. Totally asking for a friend…

  • zlatiah@lemmy.worldOP
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    2 months ago

    Personally I work in academia so relocating is significantly easier (doesn’t require local language at work, academia has a foreign worker culture), and I did it before US scientists collectively realized what happened and wanted to get the fuck out… Even then it was difficult for me to find a job. Sadly I don’t think it is as easy for tech…

    Also I suspect moving between different states in the US or between different EU member states would be significantly easier

    • Eq0@literature.cafe
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      1 month ago

      I hopped around in Europe with no problem: applied online to jobs, as soon as i got a job found a place. If you are young with little commitments and there is no bureaucracy hindering you, relocating is super easy. Nowadays, with a family with young kids, relocating is much more of a commitment. Luckily we really like it here, so we are not planning a new move any time soon.

      Brief timeline:

      • did my bachelor in my hometown
      • did a 6 months student transfer
      • decided I didn’t want to go back, applied for a new university outside the EU (no visa needed for students)
      • found two internships during my master in two different EU countries (no visa needed, unpaid so no tax hurdles)
      • found a phd position in a new EU country (no visa needed, moved with two suitcases and an easyjet plain ticket)
      • moved to US for a temporary position (this was actually bureaucratically demanding, the move took 8 months between getting the job and being there)
      • moved back to EU without a job prospect, found a temp job in a country I had already visited (no visa problems)
      • moved again for a fixed position (last move, with a kid, took some 3 months to plan out)