Work–Family Arrangement and Conflict: Do Individual Gender Role Attitudes and National Gender Culture Matter?

This article examines the relationship between couples’ work–family arrangement and individuals’ perceived work–family conflict (WFC), considering individuals’ attitudes towards gender roles and national gender culture in 37 countries (N = 15,114). Previous research has shown that WFC depends on wor...

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Main Authors: Christina Bornatici, Marieke Heers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2020-10-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/2967
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spelling doaj-bd3f2d3829cd4cad9e01a048655293d62020-11-25T03:55:09ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032020-10-0184466010.17645/si.v8i4.29671668Work–Family Arrangement and Conflict: Do Individual Gender Role Attitudes and National Gender Culture Matter?Christina Bornatici0Marieke Heers1FORS—Swiss Centre of Expertise in the Social Sciences, University of Lausanne, SwitzerlandFORS—Swiss Centre of Expertise in the Social Sciences, University of Lausanne, SwitzerlandThis article examines the relationship between couples’ work–family arrangement and individuals’ perceived work–family conflict (WFC), considering individuals’ attitudes towards gender roles and national gender culture in 37 countries (N = 15,114). Previous research has shown that WFC depends on work and family demands and has mostly accounted for absolute time spent in paid and domestic work. We hypothesize that WFC depends on couples’ work–family arrangement in terms of time spent in paid, domestic and care work. We further expect that the relationship between couples’ work–family arrangement and WFC depends on individuals’ gender attitudes and national gender culture. To test these assumptions, we use the ISSP-2012 data and apply multilevel linear regression analyses. The findings indicate that an egalitarian work–family arrangement—that is, sharing paid, domestic and care work equally with one’s partner—is associated with lower levels of WFC. Moreover, individuals with egalitarian gender attitudes and an egalitarian work–family arrangement experience less WFC than individuals with inconsistent attitudes and behaviours. Individuals with consistent traditional attitudes and behaviours experience the most conflict. Finally, a more egalitarian gender culture relates to less WFC. Cross-level interactions indicate that the relationship between work–family arrangement and WFC is not mediated by countries’ gender culture.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/2967care workcouple dynamicsgender culturegender rolework–family arrangementwork–family conflict
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christina Bornatici
Marieke Heers
spellingShingle Christina Bornatici
Marieke Heers
Work–Family Arrangement and Conflict: Do Individual Gender Role Attitudes and National Gender Culture Matter?
Social Inclusion
care work
couple dynamics
gender culture
gender role
work–family arrangement
work–family conflict
author_facet Christina Bornatici
Marieke Heers
author_sort Christina Bornatici
title Work–Family Arrangement and Conflict: Do Individual Gender Role Attitudes and National Gender Culture Matter?
title_short Work–Family Arrangement and Conflict: Do Individual Gender Role Attitudes and National Gender Culture Matter?
title_full Work–Family Arrangement and Conflict: Do Individual Gender Role Attitudes and National Gender Culture Matter?
title_fullStr Work–Family Arrangement and Conflict: Do Individual Gender Role Attitudes and National Gender Culture Matter?
title_full_unstemmed Work–Family Arrangement and Conflict: Do Individual Gender Role Attitudes and National Gender Culture Matter?
title_sort work–family arrangement and conflict: do individual gender role attitudes and national gender culture matter?
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2020-10-01
description This article examines the relationship between couples’ work–family arrangement and individuals’ perceived work–family conflict (WFC), considering individuals’ attitudes towards gender roles and national gender culture in 37 countries (N = 15,114). Previous research has shown that WFC depends on work and family demands and has mostly accounted for absolute time spent in paid and domestic work. We hypothesize that WFC depends on couples’ work–family arrangement in terms of time spent in paid, domestic and care work. We further expect that the relationship between couples’ work–family arrangement and WFC depends on individuals’ gender attitudes and national gender culture. To test these assumptions, we use the ISSP-2012 data and apply multilevel linear regression analyses. The findings indicate that an egalitarian work–family arrangement—that is, sharing paid, domestic and care work equally with one’s partner—is associated with lower levels of WFC. Moreover, individuals with egalitarian gender attitudes and an egalitarian work–family arrangement experience less WFC than individuals with inconsistent attitudes and behaviours. Individuals with consistent traditional attitudes and behaviours experience the most conflict. Finally, a more egalitarian gender culture relates to less WFC. Cross-level interactions indicate that the relationship between work–family arrangement and WFC is not mediated by countries’ gender culture.
topic care work
couple dynamics
gender culture
gender role
work–family arrangement
work–family conflict
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/2967
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