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Journal ArticleDOI

Crossover of work–family conflict in supervisor–subordinate dyads in India: does LMX matter?

Pavithra Sampath, +2 more
- Vol. 9, Iss: 3, pp 373-390
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TLDR
In this article, the crossover of work-family conflict (WFC) from supervisors to subordinates employed in conventional work settings was investigated, and the crossover was found to be lower in the event of higher LMX quality.
Abstract
This study investigated the crossover of work–family conflict (WFC) from supervisors to subordinates employed in conventional work settings. The authors hypothesized that the supervisor’s WFC would impact the subordinate’s level of WFC, and the level of crossover would vary with relationship quality or LMX.,The authors surveyed a matched set of 150 supervisors and 193 subordinates from several services organizations who were recruited using a snowballing technique. Data were analysed using hierarchical regression analyses and moderation testing.,Results confirmed a significant direct crossover path. Further, the crossover was found to be lowered in the event of higher LMX quality.,The findings provide significant insights into the conditions under which transmission of WFC takes place by broadening crossover research in the work–family area. Future studies must explore the crossover of work–family enrichment and the role of leadership styles, empathy and perspective taking of subordinates in the crossover.,Supervisors must endeavour to reduce the level of WFC of subordinates by trying to build high-quality LMX by regularly interacting with them and by providing them a supportive climate. Employees in turn must support supervisors in various means, which will help them gaining manager’s trust and support.,Examination of the potential mitigating effect of high-quality LMX in the crossover of WFC in supervisor–subordinate dyads has rarely been investigated in the past.

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Reconsidering work-family interactions and satisfaction: A meta-analysis: (518422013-318)

TL;DR: The authors used meta-analytic path analysis to examine the relative merits of source attribution and domain specificity for both positive and negative family interactions, and the results universally supported the less popular source attribution perspective.
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Impact of leadership gender stereotyping on managing familial conflict, matrimonial strategies, divorce decisions and marital satisfaction in Qatar

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the direct and indirect effects of leadership style and gender roles on managing familial conflict, as well as how such conflict resolution affects divorce decisions and overall marital satisfaction (SF) in Qatar.
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How work-family conflict affects knowledge workers' innovative behavior: a spillover-crossover-spillover model of dual-career couples

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors explored how the work-family conflict affects knowledge workers' innovative behavior and when such a conflict arises, and they showed that work-to-family conflicts had not only a direct negative effect on knowledge workers’ innovative behavior but also an indirect effect through spouses' within-family emotional exhaustion and knowledge workers's family to-work conflict.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of leader-member exchange (LMX) on work-family interference and work-family facilitation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze the relationship between leadership and work-family spillovers and find that a good relationship with a supervisor positively relates to the meaningfulness of work, as it could get more interesting work and more understanding of your role within the organization.
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LMX, Breach Perceptions, Work-Family Conflict, and Well-Being: A Mediational Model

TL;DR: Findings suggest that the supervisor plays a critical role as a frontline representative for the organization and that work-family conflict is reduced and well-being enhanced through a process of social exchange between the supervisor and worker.
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Understanding the causes and consequences of work-family conflict: An exploratory study of Nigerian employees

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used qualitative data gleaned from the semi-structured interviews of 88 employees (44 university lecturers and 44 medical doctors) in cities in the six geo-political zones of Nigeria to examine the multi-faceted causes and consequences of work-family conflict.
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Work–Family Conflict and Organisationally Valued Outcomes: The Moderating Role of Decision Latitude in Five National Contexts

TL;DR: In this paper, the moderating role of decision latitude on the relationship between work-family conflict and psychological strain was examined across five countries and it was hypothesised that decision latitude would moderate the relationship more strongly in the individualistic countries than in the collectivistic countries (India, Indonesia, and South Korea).
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Crossover specificity of team‐level work‐family conflict to individual‐level work‐family conflict

TL;DR: In this article, the crossover specificity of team-level stressors to individual-level work-family conflict was investigated in a multilevel analysis with data from 428 employees of a Dutch municipality working in 49 teams.
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