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Edgell, Penny; Ammons, Samantha K.; Dahlin, Eric C. – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
The "New Economy" features 24/7 employment, varied work schedules, job insecurity, and lower benefits and wages, which lead to disparities in experiences of security and sufficiency. This study investigates sufficiency concerns in the New Economy; who is having trouble making ends meet? Sufficiency concerns are subjective perceptions that work is…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Higher Education, Family Life, Conflict
Hook, Jennifer L.; Wolfe, Christina M. – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
The authors examine variation in employed fathers' time with children ages 0 to 14 years, using time use surveys from the United States (2003), Germany (2001), Norway (2000), and the United Kingdom (2000). They examine levels of father involvement and mechanisms associated involvement on both weekdays (N = 4,192) and weekends (N = 3,024). They…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employed Parents, Fathers, Parent Child Relationship
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
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
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
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
Barry, Amy A.; Smith, JuliAnna Z.; Deutsch, Francine M.; Perry-Jenkins, Maureen – Journal of Family Issues, 2011
This study explored first-time fathers' perceived child care skill over the transition to parenthood, based on face-to-face interviews of 152 working-class, dual-earner couples. Analyses examined the associations among fathers' perceived skill and prenatal perception of skill, child care involvement, mothers' breastfeeding, maternal gatekeeping,…
Descriptors: Mothers, Crying, Parent Child Relationship, Parenting Skills
Verbakel, Ellen – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
We study to what extent adjustments in labor market participation, defined as employment entry and exit, and as increases and reductions of weekly working hours, depend on resources of the partner. Moreover, we investigate whether the influence of the partner depends on historical period, human capital, and children. We are especially interested…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Human Capital, Labor Market, Foreign Countries
Gordon, Judith R.; Pruchno, Rachel A.; Wilson-Genderson, Maureen; Murphy, Wendy Marcinkus; Rose, Miriam – Journal of Family Issues, 2012
Positing role conflict as a bidirectional construct in which work interferes with caregiving (WIC) and caregiving interferes with work (CIW), this study investigated its antecedents (demands and support of caregiving and work) and consequences (role strain). A national sample of 583 women between the ages of 50 and 64 years identified using…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Role Conflict, Caregivers, Telephone Surveys
Roeters, Anne; Treas, Judith K. – Journal of Family Issues, 2011
This study uses data on 898 Dutch couples with minor children to examine whether parental work demands are related differently to one-on-one parent-child, family, and couple leisure activities. The authors presume that the impact of working hours and work arrangements is smaller on activities that are prioritized highly and that are easier and…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Mothers, Foreign Countries, Child Rearing
Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Gareis, Karen C.; Sabattini, Laura; Carter, Nancy M. – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Most employed parents, many in dual-earner couples, are at work when their children get out of school, generating parental concerns about children's welfare after school. Parental concerns are hypothesized to be related to respondent and partner work hours, respondent schedule control, and child's unsupervised time and to give rise to job…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Employed Parents, Latchkey Children, Working Hours
Gudmunson, Clinton G.; Danes, Sharon M.; Werbel, James D.; Loy, Johnben Teik-Cheok – Journal of Family Issues, 2009
This study examines whether emotional spousal support contributes to business owners' perceived work-family balance while launching a family business. Hobfoll's Conservation of Resources theory of stress is applied to 109 family business owners and their spouses. Results from structural equation models support several hypotheses. First, reports of…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Family Work Relationship, Spouses, Stress Variables
Karimi, Leila – Journal of Family Issues, 2009
This study aims at examining gender differences in the experience of work-family interference and perceived job-life satisfaction in a group of Iranian employees. The participants in the study consist of 387 Iranian male and female employees from a variety of organizations. The results of t tests and multiple regression analysis using EQS 6.1…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gender Differences, Family Work Relationship, Job Satisfaction
Chait Barnett, Rosalind; Gareis, Karen C.; Brennan, Robert T. – Journal of Family Issues, 2008
In a sample of 55 dual-earner families with children aged 8 to 14 in which the mothers are registered nurses regularly working either day shifts (typically 7:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.) or evening shifts (typically 3:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.), we estimated the within-couple relationship between the wife's work variables (i.e., work shift, work hours, and…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Working Hours, Spouses, Nurses
Reynolds, Jeremy; Aletraris, Lydia – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
This article helps integrate research on work hours and work-family issues by examining how work-family conflict is related to the desire for more and fewer hours of work. Using the first wave of the Household Income and Labor Dynamics in Australia survey, we find that work-to-family conflict is associated with a desire for fewer hours of work.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Work Relationship, Working Hours, Employed Parents
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