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Journal ArticleDOI

Family-Friendly Policies and Work-Life Balance in the Public Sector

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TLDR
In this paper, the effects of leave policies, employer supported access to child care, alternative work scheduling, and a culture of family support on work-life balance (WLB) were investigated with a nationwide sample of state government employees.
Abstract
Family-friendly policies and culture are important components of creating a healthy work environment and are positively related to work outcomes for public employees and organizations. Furthermore, family-friendly policies and culture are critical mechanisms for supporting the careers and advancement of women in public service and enhancing gender equity in public sector employment. While both policies and culture can facilitate women’s participation in the public sector workforce, they may affect men and women differently. Using data from a 2011 study with a nationwide sample of state government employees, we investigate the effects of employee take-up of leave policies, employer supported access to child care, alternative work scheduling, and a culture of family support on work–life balance (WLB). We examine where these variables differ in their effects on WLB among men and women and make specific recommendations to further WLB among women. The results inform the literature on family-friendly policies and culture in public organizations.

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Citations
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Equal but Inequitable: Who Benefits from Gender-Neutral Tenure Clock Stopping Policies?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the adoption of gender-neutral tenure clock stopping policies substantially reduced female tenure rates while substantially increasing male tenure rates at top-50 economics departments in the United States.
ReportDOI

Educational field, economic uncertainty, and fertility decline in Finland in 2010–2019

TL;DR: In this article , the authors used detailed Finnish register data to calculate total fertility rates and the proportion of women expected to have a first birth (TFRp1) in 2010-2019 for 153 fields of education and estimated how the characteristics of each field predicted its fertility decline.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sources of Conflict Between Work and Family Roles

TL;DR: An examination of the literature on conflict between work and family roles suggests that work-family conflict exists when time devoted to the requirements of one role makes it difficult to fulfill requirements of another.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational Stress: Studies in Role Conflict and Ambiguity.

TL;DR: Wolfe et al. as discussed by the authors reviewed the review by the Harry Levinson Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 10, No. 1, Special Issue on Professionals in Organizations (Jun., 1965), pp. 125-129.
Journal ArticleDOI

Family-Supportive Work Environments: The Role of Organizational Perceptions

TL;DR: This article examined global employee perceptions regarding the extent their work organization is family-supportive (FSOP) and found that FSOP responses related significantly to the number of family-friendly benefits offered by the organization, benefit usage, and perceived family support from supervisors.
Journal ArticleDOI

When Work–Family Benefits Are Not Enough: The Influence of Work–Family Culture on Benefit Utilization, Organizational Attachment, and Work–Family Conflict☆☆☆★

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a measure of work-family culture (i.e., the shared assumptions, beliefs, and values regarding the extent to which an organization supports and values the integration of employees' work and family lives) and examined its relationship to work family benefit utilization, organizational attachment, and work family conflict.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perspectives on the Study of Work-life Balance:

TL;DR: Work-life balance has become an important topic for research and policy in some countries as mentioned in this paper, and a review of contemporary theory and research on work life balance can be found in this article.
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