The Relationship of Job Attribute Preferences to Employment, Hours of Paid Work, and Family Responsibilities: An Analysis Comparing Women and Men

Sex Roles ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 54 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 95-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth A. Corrigall ◽  
Alison M. Konrad
2011 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 651-662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eiji Yoshioka ◽  
Yasuaki Saijo ◽  
Toshiko Kita ◽  
Hiroki Satoh ◽  
Mariko Kawaharada ◽  
...  

Epigram ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-18
Author(s):  
Lieke Puspasari ◽  
Yunita Faela Nisa

This study aims to determine the effect of work and family conflicts as well as family and work conflicts on work engagement, and personality extraversion and conscientiousness as moderator variables in ministries x. Through this research, it is expected to know the significance of the influence of work and family conflicts and family and work conflicts on the work engagement, and whether conscientiousness and extraversion personalities can be moderator variables for Ministry X employees. The population studied in this study was PNS Ministry X. this study amounted to 210 respondents. Data collection instruments using the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale (UWES) were developed by Schaufeli and Bakker, work and family conflicts and family and work conflicts developed by Netemeyer et al., 1996. This study uses a quantitative approach with multiple regression analysis methods, and validation testing construct using the Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) technique. The research sample was determined using convenient sampling technique. The results of this study indicate that there is a significant influence of the variable influence of work and family conflicts as well as family and work conflicts on work engagement. Extraversion and conscientiousness personality also affect work totality. Extraversion personality does not moderate the relationship of work and family conflicts and family and work conflicts to the totality of work. So that Hypothesis 05 and Hypothesis 06 are accepted. Personality conscientiousness moderates the relationship of work and family conflict and family and work conflict to work engagement. 


1998 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 33-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Hayes ◽  
Helen M.G. Watt

The relationship of work and family life is increasingly complex. Many families are forced to create a complicated patchwork of child care arrangements to accommodate the demands of their work. The average hours worked per week are increasing and part-time and casual work are becoming the norm for many workers, particularly women. Recently, there has been a nostalgic appeal by some politicians and their constituents for a return to a simpler world where work and family life were less intricately interwoven. While appealing to its adherents, the call for a return to the comfortable nuclear family flies in the face of some fundamental contemporary demographic realities. This paper reports the results of a survey of the attitudes to caregiving and career of women enrolled in a university-based early childhood program. The paper is in two parts. The first sets the context for the survey, by exploring the origins of the contemporary patterns of relationship between work and family life. The second describes the survey and its results. The results indicate that attitudes to maternal care and career roles are more traditional among younger, less experienced students than among their older peers with greater experience of parenting and employment. The implications of the results and future trends in the relationship of work and family life are discussed, in the light of contemporary features of families and demographic trends.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-180
Author(s):  
Yeni Hartati ◽  
Tuti Farida ◽  
Sri Handayani ◽  
Helni Anggraini

The most important nutritional needs of infants 0-6 months is by giving breast milk, because its composition is in accordance with the amount of nutrients needed by babies. Exclusive breastfeeding for infants aged 0-6 months is beneficial for the baby's survival, growth, and development. Starting from 2018-2020, the coverage of infants receiving exclusive breastfeeding in Lubuk Batang Baru Village did not exceed the strategic plan target.This study aims to determine the relationship between education, work and family support with exclusive breastfeeding for infants aged more than 6 months in Lubuk Batang Baru Village in 2021.This study is a quantitative study with a cross sectional approach. The sample of this study was a total population of 40 respondents. Bivariate analysis used in this study is chi square.The results showed that there was a relationship between education (p value 0.027), work (p value 0.038) and family support (p value 0.002) with exclusive breastfeeding for infants aged more than 6 months in Lubuk Batang Baru Village in 2021.


2003 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 583-601 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARIA EVANDROU ◽  
KAREN GLASER

This paper uses work and caring history information from the British Family and Working Lives Survey (1994/5) to examine the provision of family care and its impact upon the employment and the subsequent state and private pension entitlement among mid-life men and women. Combining paid employment with care-giving was not an option for a significant minority of women with caring responsibilities in mid-life. One-in-five mid-life women who have ever had caring responsibilities reported that, upon starting caring, they stopped work altogether, and another one-in-five reported that they worked fewer hours, earned less money or could only work restricted hours. Fewer men and women who stopped work as a result of caring were members of an occupational pension scheme than other groups; and they had accumulated fewer years of contributions than their counterparts who continued working, with direct implications for their level of pension income in later life. The extension of employers' schemes to help workers balance paid work and family responsibilities would facilitate more carers remaining in the labour market, as would an explicit carers' dimension within the new ‘Working Tax Credit’. Consideration should also be given to extending credits for second tier pensions to working carers who provide care for over 16 hours a week and who earn below the lower earnings limit. This will ensure that carers who juggle low paid work and care are not penalised for working, and that their unpaid contribution to society is recognised.


1988 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 403-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasuko Morinaga-Okada ◽  
Ryoko Koshi

225 female and 172 male college students were asked to rate their preferences and perceived social norms for division of paid work, housework, and childcare between husband and wife. More women than men preferred to divide paid work equally. Differences between perceived social norms and personal preferences were nearly the same quantitatively for female and male students; however, women's preferences tended to be more egalitarian than perceived social norms while men's preferences were in opposite direction


Author(s):  
Francine D. Blau ◽  
Anne E. Winkler

This chapter focuses on women, work, and family, with a particular focus on differences by educational attainment. First, we review long-term trends regarding family structure, participation in the labor market, and time spent in household production, including time with children. In looking at family, we focus on mothers with children. Next we examine key challenges faced by mothers as they seek to combine motherhood and paid work: workforce interruptions associated with childbearing, the impact of home and family responsibilities, and constraints posed by workplace culture. We also consider the role that gendered norms play in shaping outcomes for mothers. We conclude by discussing policies that have the potential to increase gender equality in the workplace and mitigate the considerable conflicts faced by many women as they seek to balance work and family.


Sociology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Misun Lim ◽  
Joya Misra

There are many different ways to define work–life balance. Some scholars emphasize that work–life balance requires balancing demands of both paid work and family responsibilities or maximizing satisfaction by minimizing conflict between paid work and family responsibilities. Others view work–life balance as encompassing the way that boundaries blur between work, family, and leisure time. In attempting to address work–life balance, workers are generally trying to preserve both quality of life, and potential for career advancements, while employers are trying to preserve high productivity and reduce worker turnover. Although the term “work–life balance” is widely used, alternative terms are also employed, such as work–family balance, work–life integration, work–life harmonization, or work–life articulation. Research on attempts to manage paid work along with family and other parts of life has been carried out for decades. Yet this scholarship has exploded in the last two decades, particularly as middle-class women have increased their workforce participation, but also work is being carried out during nonstandard hours, technology is creating more permeability between work and home, and union protections have been weakened. Work–life balance efforts may lead to poor-quality jobs in terms of earnings, job security, working time and promotion opportunities, rather than long-term quality employment over the life course that allows for leisure and family time. Research on work–life balance should take structural, rather than individual approaches, to consider workplace cultures, including by occupation and gender inequality, and recognize the different assumptions underlying policies aimed at addressing work–life balance.


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