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Journal ArticleDOI

The constraints of a ‘work–life balance’ approach: an international perspective

Suzan Lewis, +2 more
- 12 Mar 2007 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 3, pp 360-373
TLDR
Work-life balance has been a hot topic in the literature for several decades (see, e.g., Lewis and Cooper, 1999; as mentioned in this paper ). But the focus on this topic has always reflected social, economic and workplace developments and concerns, shifting in response to new trends.
Abstract
Locating work–life balance discourse in time and place The huge recent growth in attention to ‘work–life balance’(WLB) dilemmas in academic, political, professional and popular literature might give the impression that this is, at best, a new area of concern, or at worst, a passing fad. This would, however, be misleading. The WLB metaphor is a social construct located within a particular period of time and originating in a Western context, but dilemmas relating to the management of paid work alongside other parts of life, especially family, have been the focus of research for several decades (see, e.g., Rapoport and Rapoport, 1965). Research on this topic has always reflected social, economic and workplace developments and concerns, shifting in response to new trends. For example, as the numbers of women entering the labour force grew, from the 1960s, research in certain contexts tended to focus on ‘working mothers’ or dual earner families, while concerns about stress and burnout associated with workplace changes in the 1980s and 1990s were reflected in research and debate about work–family conflict (Lewis and Cooper, 1999). The terminology used to refer to these issues continues to evolve in response to current concerns. In particular, a shift from ‘work–family’ and ‘family-friendly policies’ with their implicit focus on women, especially mothers, to ‘work–life’, the precursor of the more recent ‘work–life balance’ (WLB) discourse began in the 1990s. This linguistic shift reflected a broader and more inclusive way of framing the debate to engage men and women with and without children or other caring commitments and was partly a response to backlash against work–family policies by those without obvious family obligations.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Doing more with less? Flexible working practices and the intensification of work

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the apparent paradox of high job satisfaction and organizational commitment alongside work intensification can be explained by employees trading flexibility for effort, in order to return benefit to their employer, and they identify three means by which this intensification occurs -imposed intensification, enabled intensification and intensification as an act of reciprocation or exchange.
Journal ArticleDOI

Work–life initiatives and organizational change: Overcoming mixed messages to move from the margin to the mainstream

TL;DR: Work-life initiatives address two main organizational challenges: structural (flexible job design, human resource policies) and cultural (supportive supervisors, climate) factors as mentioned in this paper, but they usually are marginalized rather than mainstreamed into organizational systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Editorial: work-life balance: a matter of choice?

TL;DR: Work-life balance has come to the forefront of policy discourse in developed countries in recent years, against a backdrop of globalization and rapid technological change, an ageing population and concerns over labour market participation rates, particularly those of mothers at a time when fertility rates are falling as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Work–Life, Diversity and Intersectionality: A Critical Review and Research Agenda

TL;DR: The authors provides a critical review of the work-life literature from 1990 onwards through the lens of diversity, with a particular focus on disparities of power induced by methodological and conceptual framings of work and life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flexible Working and Performance: A Systematic Review of the Evidence for a Business Case

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the literature on the link between flexible working arrangements and performance-related outcomes and found that the evidence fails to demonstrate a business case for the use of flexible working arrangement.
References
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Book

Representation: Cultural representations and signifying practices.

Stuart Hall
TL;DR: The Work of Representation - Stuart Hall Representing the Social - Peter Hamilton France and Frenchness in Post-War Humanist Photography The Poetics and Politics of Exhibiting Other Cultures - Henrietta Lidchi The Spectacle of the 'Other' as discussed by the authors.
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TL;DR: Hochschild as mentioned in this paper found that men share housework equally with their wives in only twenty percent of dual-career families, and that women tend to suffer from chronic exhaustion, low sex drive, and more frequent illness as a result.
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