Work–Life Balance, Organizations and Social Sustainability: Analyzing Female Telework in Spain

The concept of work–life balance has recently established itself as a key component on route maps drawn up in the pursuit of social sustainability, both on a local scale, represented by individual organizations, and on a more general one, represented by global institutions such as the United Nations...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ana Gálvez, Francisco Tirado, M. Jesús Martínez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/9/3567
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spelling doaj-9b2f26a68d9444e4a1691c554dcc4c502020-11-25T02:26:29ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-04-01123567356710.3390/su12093567Work–Life Balance, Organizations and Social Sustainability: Analyzing Female Telework in SpainAna Gálvez0Francisco Tirado1M. Jesús Martínez2Faculty of Psychology and Education Sciences, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, 08018 Barcelona, SpainDepartment of Social Psychology, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, SpainFaculty of Economics and Business, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, 08035 Barcelona, SpainThe concept of work–life balance has recently established itself as a key component on route maps drawn up in the pursuit of social sustainability, both on a local scale, represented by individual organizations, and on a more general one, represented by global institutions such as the United Nations. Our article analyzes telework’s use as a political tool within organizations that either boost or hinder the development of social sustainability. Additionally, we propose the notion of “life sustainability” to analyze how female teleworkers describe the link between specific work cultures and the possibility of fulfilling social sustainability goals in local work environments through the achievement of a good work–life balance. Our research was performed following a qualitative approach, drawing from a sample of 24 individual interviews and 10 focus groups with a total of 48 participants, all of which are female teleworkers with family responsibilities. Our main findings allow us to summarize the interviewees’ social perceptions into two categories, which we have dubbed ‘life sustainability ecologies’ and ‘presence-based ecologies’. We conclude by discussing female teleworkers’ claim that work–life balance is directly linked to social sustainability and that the latter goal will remain out of reach as long as the issue of balance goes unresolved.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/9/3567social sustainabilitywork–life balancefemale teleworkersorganizational culturelife sustainability ecologiesqualitative methods
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ana Gálvez
Francisco Tirado
M. Jesús Martínez
spellingShingle Ana Gálvez
Francisco Tirado
M. Jesús Martínez
Work–Life Balance, Organizations and Social Sustainability: Analyzing Female Telework in Spain
Sustainability
social sustainability
work–life balance
female teleworkers
organizational culture
life sustainability ecologies
qualitative methods
author_facet Ana Gálvez
Francisco Tirado
M. Jesús Martínez
author_sort Ana Gálvez
title Work–Life Balance, Organizations and Social Sustainability: Analyzing Female Telework in Spain
title_short Work–Life Balance, Organizations and Social Sustainability: Analyzing Female Telework in Spain
title_full Work–Life Balance, Organizations and Social Sustainability: Analyzing Female Telework in Spain
title_fullStr Work–Life Balance, Organizations and Social Sustainability: Analyzing Female Telework in Spain
title_full_unstemmed Work–Life Balance, Organizations and Social Sustainability: Analyzing Female Telework in Spain
title_sort work–life balance, organizations and social sustainability: analyzing female telework in spain
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-04-01
description The concept of work–life balance has recently established itself as a key component on route maps drawn up in the pursuit of social sustainability, both on a local scale, represented by individual organizations, and on a more general one, represented by global institutions such as the United Nations. Our article analyzes telework’s use as a political tool within organizations that either boost or hinder the development of social sustainability. Additionally, we propose the notion of “life sustainability” to analyze how female teleworkers describe the link between specific work cultures and the possibility of fulfilling social sustainability goals in local work environments through the achievement of a good work–life balance. Our research was performed following a qualitative approach, drawing from a sample of 24 individual interviews and 10 focus groups with a total of 48 participants, all of which are female teleworkers with family responsibilities. Our main findings allow us to summarize the interviewees’ social perceptions into two categories, which we have dubbed ‘life sustainability ecologies’ and ‘presence-based ecologies’. We conclude by discussing female teleworkers’ claim that work–life balance is directly linked to social sustainability and that the latter goal will remain out of reach as long as the issue of balance goes unresolved.
topic social sustainability
work–life balance
female teleworkers
organizational culture
life sustainability ecologies
qualitative methods
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/9/3567
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