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Showing 1 to 15 of 70 results Save | Export
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Stewart, Lisa M. – Journal of Family Issues, 2013
This study compared work-family and family-work conflict for employed family caregivers with disability-related care responsibilities in contrast to employed family caregivers with typical care responsibilities. Using data from the 2002 National Study of the Changing Workforce, a population-based survey of the U.S. workforce, formal and informal…
Descriptors: Conflict, Employees, Family Work Relationship, Caregivers
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Schober, Pia S. – Journal of Family Issues, 2013
This study investigates whether gender inequality in the division of housework and child care may be an obstacle to childbearing and relationship stability among different groups of British couples. Furthermore, it explores whether outsourcing of domestic labor ameliorates any negative effects of domestic work inequality. The empirical…
Descriptors: Females, Employment Level, Child Care, Foreign Countries
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Ornstein, Michael; Stalker, Glenn J. – Journal of Family Issues, 2013
Based on the 2006 Canadian Census "long form" sample of one in every five households, the authors develop a detailed typology of family strategies for employment and the care of preschool children. The analysis is restricted to opposite-sex couples with at least one child under age 6 and no older child or other adult in the household.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employment Patterns, Preschool Children, Employed Parents
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Schieman, Scott; Young, Marisa – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Using data from a 2007 U.S. survey of workers, this article examines the implications of schedule control for work-family role blurring and work-family conflict. Four main findings indicate that (a) schedule control is associated with more frequent working at home and work-family multitasking activities; (b) the positive association between…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Conflict, Role, Working Hours
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Taht, Kadri; Mills, Melinda – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
Many children live in households where either one or both parents work nonstandard schedules in the evening, night, or weekend. This study tests two competing hypotheses of whether nonstandard schedules result in lower levels of parent-child interaction or in more time with children. Using the first wave of the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study of…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Parent Child Relationship, Interaction, Foreign Countries
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Natti, Jouko; Anttila, Timo; Tammelin, Mia – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
The industrial working-time regime is dissolving--not dramatically, but rather as a trend. A new trend is that those in dynamic sectors and in a good labor market position work long hours: Demanding knowledge work appears to require the marginalization of private life. This study investigates the family situation of knowledge workers, the…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Labor Market, Foreign Countries, Trend Analysis
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Bass, Brenda L.; Grzywacz, Joseph G. – Journal of Family Issues, 2011
Using an ecological person-process-context model and recent conceptualization of the "employment continuum," this study examines differences in components of work-family balance among individuals in diverse types of jobs ranging from "inadequate" to "optimal." Cross-sectional data from the 1997 National Study of the Changing Workforce (n = 2,877)…
Descriptors: Conflict, Enrichment, Employment Level, Family Work Relationship
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Hostetler, Andrew J.; Desrochers, Stephan; Kopko, Kimberly; Moen, Phyllis – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
This study uses individual- and couple-level analyses to examine the influence of work-family demands and community resources on marital and family satisfaction within a sample of dual-earner parents with dependent children (N = 260 couples, 520 individuals). Total couple work hours were strongly negatively associated with marital satisfaction for…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Employed Parents, Mothers, Marital Satisfaction
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Andreassi, Jeanine K. – Journal of Family Issues, 2011
Employees (N = 291) of various industries and companies were surveyed to study how individual factors (coping and personality) affect work-family conflict: strain-based work-to-family conflict (S-WFC), time-based work-to-family conflict (T-WFC), strain-based family-to-work conflict (S-FWC), and time-based family-to-work conflict (T-FWC). As…
Descriptors: Locus of Control, Conflict, Personality, Coping
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Barnes, Medora W. – Journal of Family Issues, 2013
There are good reasons to suspect that the transition parents go through when having their second child may be different from when having their first, yet these differences remain understudied. This study focuses on one specific area of possible divergence by looking at how first-time versus second-time mothers decide on maternity leave length. To…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Family Work Relationship, Birth, Leaves of Absence
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Nomaguchi, Kei M. – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
Although researchers argue that single parents perceive more work-family conflict than married parents, little research has examined nuances in such differences. Using data from the 2002 National Study of Changing Workforce (N = 1,430), this study examines differences in home-to-job conflict by marital status and gender among employed parents.…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Mothers, One Parent Family, Conflict
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Harper, Scott E.; Martin, Alan M. – Journal of Family Issues, 2013
Transnational migratory labor remains a primary method many Filipinos use in an effort to gain financial security for their families. Based on data collected from an urban Southern Visayan province during the summer of 2007, this study examined a sample of 116 OFW (Overseas Filipino Workers) families and a sample of 99 traditional two-parent…
Descriptors: Migrant Workers, Comparative Analysis, Mothers, Family Characteristics
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Forry, Nicole D.; Hofferth, Sandra L. – Journal of Family Issues, 2011
With the passage of welfare reform, support for low-income parents to not only obtain but also maintain work has become imperative. The role of child care subsidies in supporting parents' job tenure has received little attention in the literature. This article examines the association between receiving a child care subsidy and experiencing a child…
Descriptors: Grants, Welfare Services, Child Care, Financial Support
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Millar, Michelle; Coen, Liam; Bradley, Ciara; Rau, Henrike – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
Recent studies of family life in Ireland have focused on changes in "traditional" family structures, including the increase in one-parent families. This article illustrates the impact dominant conceptions in Irish society that privilege the family based on marriage have on one-parent family policy. The authors focus on two key areas of…
Descriptors: Family Characteristics, Child Rearing, Interpersonal Relationship, Foreign Countries
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Martinengo, Giuseppe; Jacob, Jenet I.; Hill, E. Jeffrey – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
This study examines gender differences in the work-family interface across six family life stages using a global sample of IBM employees in 79 countries (N = 41,813). Family life stage was constructed using the age of respondent and age of youngest child. Results revealed that having young children at home was the critical catalyst for gender…
Descriptors: Family Life, Family Work Relationship, Gender Differences, Employees
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