scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Work–life balance

About: Work–life balance is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2252 publications have been published within this topic receiving 36240 citations. The topic is also known as: Work Life balance & work-life balance.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors tried to shed some empirical light on these issues using an innovative survey tool to collect new data on management and work-life balance practices from 732 medium sized manufacturing firms in the US, France, Germany and the UK.
Abstract: Do “Anglo-Saxon” management practices generate higher productivity only at the expense of lousy work-life balance (WLB) for workers? Many critics of “neo-liberalisme sauvage” have argued that increased competition from globalisation is damaging employees’ quality of life. Others have argued the opposite that improving work-life balance is actually a competitive tool that companies can use to raise productivity. We try to shed some empirical light on these issues using an innovative survey tool to collect new data on management and work-life balance practices from 732 medium sized manufacturing firms in the US, France, Germany and the UK. First, we show that our measure of work-life balance is a useful summary of a range of policies in the firm – family-friendly policies, flexible working, shorter hours, more holidays, subsidised childcare, etc. We show that this worklife balance measure is significantly associated with better management. Firms in environments that are more competitive and/or who are more productive, however, do not have significantly worse work-life balance for their workers. These findings are inconsistent with the view that competition, globalisation and “Anglo-Saxon” management practices are intrinsically bad for the work-life balance of workers. On the other hand, neither are these findings supportive of the optimistic “winwin” view that work-life balance improves productivity in its own right. Rather we find support for a “hybrid” theory that work-life balance is a choice for managers that is compatible with low or high productivity.

133 citations

Report SeriesDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the response of female labour force participation to the evolution of labour markets and policies supporting the reconciliation of work and family life, using country-level data from the early 1980s for 18 OECD countries, and estimated the influence of labour market and institutional characteristics on female labor force participation, and full-time and part-time employment participation.
Abstract: This paper analyses the response of female labour force participation to the evolution of labour markets and policies supporting the reconciliation of work and family life. Using country-level data from the early 1980s for 18 OECD countries, we estimate the influence of labour market and institutional characteristics on female labour force participation, and full-time and part-time employment participation. The relationship (interactions, complementarity) between different policy measures is also analyzed, as well as potential variations in the influence of policies across different Welfare regimes. The results first highlight how the increase in female educational attainment, the expansion of the service sector the increase in parttime employment opportunities have boosted women’s participation in the labour force. By contrast, there is no such clear relationship between female employment rates and the growing share of public employment. Employment rates react to changes in tax rates, in leave policies, but the rising provision of childcare formal services to working parents with children not yet three years old is a main policy driver of female labour force participation. Different policy instruments interact with each other to improve overall effectiveness. In particular, the coverage of childcare services is found to have a greater effect on women’s participation in the labour market in countries with relatively high degrees of employment protection. The effect of childcare services on female full-time employment is particularly strong in Anglophone and Nordic countries. In all, the findings suggest that the effect of childcare services on female employment is stronger in the presence of other measures supporting working mothers (as, for instance paid parental leave) while the presence of such supports seems to reduce the effectiveness of financial incentives to work for second earners. The effect of cash benefits for families and the duration of paid leave on female labour force participation also vary across welfare regimes.

132 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article examined how discourses of work-life balance are appropriated and used by women academics and found that female academics' ways of speaking about worklife balance respond to gendered attitudes about paid work and unpaid care that predominate in Australian socio-cultural life.
Abstract: This article examines how discourses of work-life balance are appropriated and used by women academics. Using data collected from semi-structured, single person interviews with 31 scholars at an Australian university, it identifies and explores four ways in which participants construct their relationship to work-life balance as: (1) a personal management task; (2) an impossible ideal; (3) detrimental to their careers; and (4) unmentionable at work. Findings reveal that female academics' ways of speaking about work-life balance respond to gendered attitudes about paid work and unpaid care that predominate in Australian socio-cultural life. By taking a discursive approach to analysing work-life balance, our research makes a unique contribution to the literature by drawing attention to the power of work-life balance discourses in shaping how women configure their attempts to create a work-life balance, and how it functions to position academic women as failing to manage this balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between the perceived usability of flexible work schedules and work/life balance was explored with 710 office-based employees and found that perceived usability and availability of these work schedules appeared to be a key element in achieving work and life balance for ma...
Abstract: The relationship between the perceived usability of flexible work schedules and work/life balance was explored with 710 office-based employees. Direct linkages were found between perceived usability of flexible work schedules and the three dimensions of work/life balance (work interference with personal life, personal life interference with work, and work/personal life enhancement). In addition, employees operating under flexitime work schedules displayed significantly higher levels of work/life balance than their counterparts utilising traditional fixed-hour schedules. However, non-significant differences in the levels of work/life balance were found between two other flexible work schedules (flexiplace and job share) and fixed-hour work schedules. Consequently, while individual flexible work schedules may have a marginal overall positive impact on employee work/life balance, the perceived usability and availability of these work schedules appears to be a key element in achieving work/life balance for ma...

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report the findings of a qualitative study that explored the unofficial techniques and activities that individuals use to shape their own work-life balance, and they theorize that this behaviour may be usefully conceptualized as physical, relational and cognitive worklife balance crafting.
Abstract: This article reports the findings of a qualitative study that explored the unofficial techniques and activities that individuals use to shape their own work–life balance. It theorizes that this behaviour may be usefully conceptualized as physical, relational and cognitive work–life balance crafting. It identifies the physical, relational and cognitive techniques that young professionals employ to manage their work–life balance and shows that distinct approaches to work–life balance crafting exist, each of which features a specific range of techniques.

129 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Job satisfaction
58K papers, 1.8M citations
88% related
Qualitative research
39.9K papers, 2.3M citations
76% related
Entrepreneurship
71.7K papers, 1.7M citations
76% related
Empirical research
51.3K papers, 1.9M citations
75% related
Corporate governance
118.5K papers, 2.7M citations
73% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023328
2022601
2021171
2020194
2019156
2018167