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Liu, Siwei; Hynes, Kathryn – Family Relations, 2012
Despite considerable interest in the causes and consequences of work-family conflict, and the frequent suggestion in fertility research that difficulty in balancing work and family is one of the factors leading to low fertility rates in several developed countries, little research uses longitudinal data to examine whether women who report…
Descriptors: Labor Force Nonparticipants, Employed Women, Child Health, Developed Nations
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Vieira, Joana Marina; AVila, Marisa; Matos, Paula Mena – Family Relations, 2012
Given the increasingly challenging task of balancing multiple adult life roles in contemporary society, this study examined the influences of both conflicting and (positively) synergistic work and family roles in mediating associations between the quality of adult attachment and both parental satisfaction and parenting stress. Participants were…
Descriptors: Parent Education, Child Rearing, Preschool Children, Parent Child Relationship
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Gassman-Pines, Anna – Family Relations, 2011
This study investigated low-income mothers' daily nighttime and weekend work and family outcomes. Sixty-one mothers of preschool-aged children reported daily on work hours, mood, mother-child interaction, and child behavior for two weeks (N = 724 person-days). Although nighttime and weekend work are both nonstandard schedules, results showed…
Descriptors: Mothers, Low Income, Child Behavior, Psychological Patterns
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Kitterod, Ragni Hege; Lappegard, Trude – Family Relations, 2012
A symmetrical family model of two workers or caregivers is a political goal in many western European countries. We explore how common this family type is in Norway, a country with high gender-equality ambitions, by using a multinomial latent class model to develop a typology of dual-earner couples with children based on the partners' allocations…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Models, Child Caregivers, Employed Parents
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Orthner, Dennis K.; Rose, Roderick – Family Relations, 2009
Using family resilience and ecological theories, we examine the relationship between partner work-required travel separations and spouse psychological well-being. The study examines the role of work-organization-provided supports for families and of informal support networks, including marital satisfaction, as factors that can reduce the risks for…
Descriptors: Spouses, Social Support Groups, Travel, Marital Satisfaction
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Marshall, Nancy L.; Tracy, Allison J. – Family Relations, 2009
This study examines work and family characteristics and depressive symptomatology among over 700 working mothers of infants. Working mothers in poorer quality jobs, as well as working mothers who were single or whose infant's health was poorer than that of other infants, reported greater depressive symptomatology. The effect of job quality on…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Mothers, Family Characteristics, Conflict
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Goodman, W. Benjamin; Crouter, Ann C. – Family Relations, 2009
The current study examined associations over an 18-month period between maternal work stressors, negative work-family spillover, and depressive symptoms in a sample of 414 employed mothers with young children living in six predominantly nonmetropolitan counties in the Eastern United States. Results from a one-group mediation model showed that a…
Descriptors: Mothers, Work Environment, Depression (Psychology), Correlation
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Wiley, Angela R.; Branscomb, Kathryn; Wang, Yan Z. – Family Relations, 2007
Family life practitioners are increasingly being called upon to help families meet work-life challenges. This article describes the grassroots beginnings, program development, and formative evaluation findings for 1 module of a Cooperative Extension work-life management program. Although the curriculum module is based on theory and research, it…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Family Life Education, Family Work Relationship, Extension Education
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Gazso, Amber – Family Relations, 2007
Drawing upon a discourse analysis of public-use policy documents and qualitative interview data, this paper explores how mothers on social assistance in three Canadian provinces balance actual or expected policy expectations of their employability (e.g., participation in welfare-to-work programming) with their caregiving responsibilities. The…
Descriptors: Employment Potential, Mothers, Discourse Analysis, Family Work Relationship
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Liechty, Janet M.; Anderson, Elaine A. – Family Relations, 2007
This case study uses a feminist framework to examine the 7-year process by which the Federal Alternative Work Schedules Act (1978-1985) became law and the reasons for reenergized implementation in the 1990s. We analyze the legislative discourse for rationale in support of and opposition to this policy, connect findings to current flexible work…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Working Hours, Personnel Policy, Case Studies
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Bird, Gloria W.; Schnurman-Crook, Abrina – Family Relations, 2005
This qualitative study of 15 dual-career couples examines the connection between partners' professional identity and coping behaviors implemented in response to work and family stressors. The analysis provided evidence that dual-career couples enact professional and family identities that rely on being competent and responsible in both work and…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Employed Parents, Coping, Stress Variables
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Davis, Kelly D.; Crouter, Ann C.; McHale, Susan M. – Family Relations, 2006
This investigation examined the implications of shift work for parent-adolescent relationship quality--intimacy, conflict, parental knowledge, and involvement--in a sample of 376 dual-earner families. The findings suggested that mothers' relationships with their adolescents were not negatively impacted by their working nonstandard schedules but…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Intimacy, Conflict, Parent Child Relationship
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Lee, Cameron; Iverson-Gilbert, Judith – Family Relations, 2003
Studies of clergy have emphasized the effects of stressors inherent to the profession and the impact of these on the minister's personal and family life. A model of family stress was employed to extend the focus to include three classes of variables: demands, social support, and perception. Results indicated that perception variables are more…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Clergy, Family Work Relationship, Protestants
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Fredriksen, Karen I.; Scharlach, Andrew E. – Family Relations, 1999
Examines the full range of family care responsibilities, including care for children and for ill and disabled adults, among employees of a government-funded research center. Employees with childcare responsibilities were found to experience higher levels of caregiving strain and occupational impacts than those caring for adults alone. (Author/GCP)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Coping, Family Caregivers, Family Work Relationship
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McFadyen, Jennifer M.; Kerpelman, Jennifer L.; Adler-Baeder, Francesca – Family Relations, 2005
The current study sought to discover whether workplace support provided by Army Family Team Building (AFTB) of the Department of the Army was associated with changes in individual knowledge of basic Army lifestyle information, and whether such changes influenced a sense of fit and satisfaction with the Army. Data were collected from 69 Army wives.…
Descriptors: Knowledge Level, Team Training, Supported Employment, Military Personnel
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