The Work-Family Interface: Spillover, Complications, and Challenges Vol: 13

Sampson Lee Blair
State University of New York at Buffalo, USA

Josip Obradović
Catholic University of Croatia, Croatia


Product Details
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9781787691124
Published:
Publisher:
Emerald Publishing Limited
Dimensions:
416 pages - 152 x 229mm
Series:
Contemporary Perspectives in Family Research
List price £102.99 List price €142.99 List price $180.99

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Family researchers have long recognized the interconnected nature of work and family. Around the globe, there is a clear recognition that the paid labor experiences of individuals will affect their families and familial relationships, often in unanticipated ways. Likewise, family relationships and family structures can significantly influence the work experience of individuals. As experiences of both families and work vary considerably across cultures, and over time, the nature of the work-family interface continues to change. The work-family interface impacts not only adults within families, but also children, and the interwoven nature of work and family yields significant consequences for all family members and relationships. 

In order to better understand these issues, this multidisciplinary volume addresses such topics as: parental employment and parenting, paid labor and marital quality, the integration of work-family domains, childcare and child development, dating and mate selection at work, work stress and family violence, health consequences of work-family conflict, relationship roles among dual-earner couples, family determinants of job performance, gender differences in work-family demands and consequences, and work stressors and family functioning; among others. The chapters in this volume provide substantial insight into our understanding of the work-family interface, and provide meaningful directions for both future research and policy.

Chapter 1. Stability in Mothers' Work Hours in Early Childhood and Children's Achievement in Kindergarten; Kei Nomaguchi and Marshal Neal Fettro
Chapter 2. Social and Cultural Context of Family Policy and the Employment of Mothers of Small Children. The Example of Poland; Ewa Giermanowska and Mariola Racław
Chapter 3. Lone Mothers’ Negotiation of Competing Employment and Parenting Responsibilities in the Contemporary British 'Worker Citizenship' Context; Nicola Carroll
Chapter 4. Perceived Work-Family Balance and Engagement Behaviors of Fathers of Infants; Melissa Rector LaGraff and Heidi E. Stolz
Chapter 5. Parental Involvement and Educational Performance among Taiwanese Adolescents: Comparing Dual-Earner and Single-Earner Families; Yi-Ping Shih, Wen-Hsu Lin, and Chin-Chun Yi
Chapter 6. A Longitudinal Examination of Work-Family Conflict among Working Mothers in the United States; Hassan Raza, Bradley van Eeden-Moorefield, Joseph G. Grzywacz, Miriam R. Linver, and Soyoung Lee
Chapter 7. Motivation for Night Work and Parents' Work-to-Family Conflict and Life Satisfaction; Matthew Weinshenker
Chapter 8. Strategies for Balance: Examining How Parents of Color Navigate Work and Life in the Academy; Madeleine Novich and Janet Garcia-Hallett
Chapter 9. Diabetes as a Consequence of Work-Family Conflicts and Gender Violence in México; Lukasz Czarnecki and Delfino Vargas Chanes
Chapter 10. Multi-Faceted Household Dependency, Work-Family Conflict, and Self-Rated Health in Five High-Income Countries; Tyler W. Myroniuk and Shannon N. Davis
Chapter 11. For Better or For Worse: Nonstandard Work Schedules and Self-Rated Health across Marital Status; Shannon Leigh Shen
Chapter 12. How Do Nurses Perceive Role-Taking and Emotional Labor Processes to Influence Work-Family Spillover?; Jamie J. Chapman
Chapter 13. Penalty for Success? Career Achievement and Gender Differences in Divorce; H. Colleen Stuart, Sue H. Moon and Tiziana Casciaro
Chapter 14. "I really don’t have a career. I just work and I like doing my work." A Qualitative Study on the Meaning of Work for Low-income Women from a Family Perspective; Sarah A. Burcher and Kadie L. Ausherbauer
Chapter 15. Telework and Work–Family Conflict across Workplaces: Investigating the Implications of Work-Family-Supportive and High-Demand Workplace Cultures; Anja-Kristin Abendroth and Mareike Reimann
Chapter 16. Evaluating Relational Factors as Possible Protective Factors for Work-Life Balance via a Linear Mixed Effects Model; Aimee Hubbard
Chapter 17. What I Think You Think about Family and Work: Pluralistic Ignorance and the Ideal Worker Norm; Christin L. Munsch and Lindsey Trimble O'Connor
Sampson Lee Blair is a Family Sociologist at The State University of New York (Buffalo), USA. His research focuses upon parent-child relationships, with particular emphasis on child and adolescent development. A Fulbright Scholar Award recipient, he has served as Chair of the Children and Youth research section of the American Sociological Association, and has taught in China and the Philippines.
Josip Obradović is a full Professor at the Catholic University of Croatia. He has taught as Visiting Professor at New York University and University of Georgia, and was a Fulbright Professor at Colorado College. He has published more than 100 research papers in Croatian and English, in addition to several books.

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