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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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Grzywacz, Joseph G.; Daniel, Stephanie S.; Tucker, Jenna; Walls, Jill; Leerkes, Esther – Family Relations, 2011
Data from the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Child Care (Phase I) and propensity score techniques were used to determine whether working full time in a nonstandard schedule job during the child's first year predicted parenting practices over 3 years. Results indicated that women who worked full time in a…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Mothers, Parenting Styles, Child Development
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Joshi, Pamela; Quane, James M.; Cherlin, Andrew J. – Family Relations, 2009
In this paper, we advance and test an integrative model of the effects of employment status, nonstandard work schedules, male employment, and women's perceptions of economic instability on union formation among low-income single mothers. On the basis of the longitudinal data from 1,299 low-income mothers from the Three-City Welfare Study, results…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Employment Level, Mothers, Low Income
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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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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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Wille, Diane E. – Family Relations, 1992
Investigated influence of maternal employment on maternal departure and reunion behavior during infant's first year among 60 infants and their mothers. Mothers who worked more hours were more autonomous and less anxious upon departure from their infant, and mothers who were satisfied with their employment role were more autonomous and less anxious…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Employed Parents, Infants, Job Satisfaction
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Beach, Betty A. – Family Relations, 1987
Examined 15 rural home-working families for allocation of work time. Found families displayed marked variability in work hour and work day patterns, both individual and across group. Both work days and allocated work times were punctuated by interruptions for child care and household chores, resulting in work/family time interaction rather than…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Family Life, Home Management, Homemakers
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Voydanoff, Patricia – Family Relations, 1980
Discusses the impact of employment insecurity, career mobility, job content and satisfaction, amount and scheduling of work time, geographic mobility, and the wife's role on corporate families. Analysis is limited to male executives and their families. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the North Central Sociological Association, May 1980. (Author)
Descriptors: Career Change, Coping, Family Relationship, Job Satisfaction
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McNeeley, R. L.; Fogarty, Barbe A. – Family Relations, 1988
Examined employer reluctance to consider and/or implement innovations by assessing the relationship between selected demographic features of companies and the receptiveness of these companies to the introduction of innovative changes, as reported by company officials. Found demographic and other features influenced company officials' willingness…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Employer Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Practices