UID:
almahu_9949493346002882
Format:
1 online resource (312 pages).
ISBN:
9781804555941
Series Statement:
Contemporary perspectives in family research ; v. 21
Content:
National strategies with the aim of facilitating a better work-family balance have increased pressure on work organizations to offer arrangements that are more family-friendly. Flexible work, such as telework or flexitime, has been argued to facilitate a better integration of work and family responsibilities, and to provide protections from career penalties to care. The spread of digital technologies has further facilitated the flexible execution of work tasks, a phenomenon that has escalated more recently due to the global COVID-19 pandemic. Within this context, where flexible work has become more widespread than ever before, Flexible Work and the Family provides a wide range of insights into current developments in the study of flexible work. Demonstrating both the facilitators and the barriers to a positive work-home environment, chapters delve into the relationship between working from home and family in light of the pandemic, as well as gender, parenthood, and status-specific patterns of the interrelation between flexible work and the family. Finally, studies from a linked-lives perspective show how flexible work impacts employees' partners and parenting behaviour. Building upon the recent global escalation of the remote work phenomenon, Flexible Work and the Family provides timely insights into flexible work's implications for the increasingly blurred work-life divide.
Note:
Chapter 1. When home becomes workplace: Work-life balance experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic / Samantha Metselaar, Laura den Dulk, and Brenda Vermeeren -- Chapter 2. Working from home during the COVID-19 pandemic: Lessons learned about the relationship between flexible work and work-family conflict / Mareike Reimann -- Chapter 3. Working remotely during the covid 19-pandemic: Work and non-work antecedents of work-life balance development / Liisa Mäkelä, Heini Pensar, Samu Kemppinen, and Hilpi Kangas -- Chapter 4. Does telework mediate the impact of occupational status on work-to-family conflicts? An investigation of conditional effects of gender and the COVID-19 pandemic / Antje Schwarz, Ayhan Adams, and Katrin Golsch -- Chapter 5. Does working from home improve the temporal alignment of work and private life? Differences between telework and informal overtime at home by gender and family responsibilities / Alexandra Mergener, Ines Entgelmeier, and Timothy Rinke -- Chapter 6. Individual and cross-partner transitions to flexitime and teleworking and cognitive subjective well-being / Aneesa F. Qadri -- Chapter 7. Workplace flexibility, work-family guilt, and working mothers' parenting behavior / Melissa Rector LaGraff and Heidi E. Stolz.
Additional Edition:
Print version: ISBN 9781804555934
Additional Edition:
PDF version: ISBN 9781804555927
Language:
English
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1108/S1530-3535202321
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