Work-Family Conflict in the European Union: The Impact of Organizational and Public Facilities

Today, as an increasing share of women and men is involved in both paid tasks at work and unpaid care tasks for children and other relatives, more people are at risk of work-family conflict, which can be a major threat to well-being and mental, but also physical health. Both organizations and govern...

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Main Authors: Chantal Remery, Joop Schippers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-11-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/16/22/4419
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spelling doaj-e6292e13512340bfa4f86e1d3b7944692020-11-24T21:33:39ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012019-11-011622441910.3390/ijerph16224419ijerph16224419Work-Family Conflict in the European Union: The Impact of Organizational and Public FacilitiesChantal Remery0Joop Schippers1Utrecht University School of Economics, Utrecht University, P.O. Box 80125, 3508 TC Utrecht, The NetherlandsFaculty of Law, Economics and Governance, Utrecht University, P.O. Box 80125, 3508 TC Utrecht, The NetherlandsToday, as an increasing share of women and men is involved in both paid tasks at work and unpaid care tasks for children and other relatives, more people are at risk of work-family conflict, which can be a major threat to well-being and mental, but also physical health. Both organizations and governments invest in arrangements that are meant to support individuals in finding a balance between work and family life. The twofold goal of our article was to establish the level of work-family conflict in the member states of the European Union by gender and to analyze to what extent different arrangements at the organizational level as well the public level help to reduce this. Using the European Working Conditions Survey supplemented with macro-data on work-family facilities and the economic and emancipation climate in a country, we performed multilevel analyses. Our findings show that the intensity of work-family conflict does not vary widely in EU28. In most countries, men experience less work-family conflict than women, although the difference is small. Caring for children and providing informal care increases perceived work-life conflict. The relatively small country differences in work-family conflict show that different combinations of national facilities and organizational arrangements together can have the same impact on individuals; apparently, there are several ways to realize the same goal of work-family conflict reduction.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/16/22/4419work-family conflictwork-family facilitiescomparative studyeuropean uniongender
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chantal Remery
Joop Schippers
spellingShingle Chantal Remery
Joop Schippers
Work-Family Conflict in the European Union: The Impact of Organizational and Public Facilities
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
work-family conflict
work-family facilities
comparative study
european union
gender
author_facet Chantal Remery
Joop Schippers
author_sort Chantal Remery
title Work-Family Conflict in the European Union: The Impact of Organizational and Public Facilities
title_short Work-Family Conflict in the European Union: The Impact of Organizational and Public Facilities
title_full Work-Family Conflict in the European Union: The Impact of Organizational and Public Facilities
title_fullStr Work-Family Conflict in the European Union: The Impact of Organizational and Public Facilities
title_full_unstemmed Work-Family Conflict in the European Union: The Impact of Organizational and Public Facilities
title_sort work-family conflict in the european union: the impact of organizational and public facilities
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1660-4601
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Today, as an increasing share of women and men is involved in both paid tasks at work and unpaid care tasks for children and other relatives, more people are at risk of work-family conflict, which can be a major threat to well-being and mental, but also physical health. Both organizations and governments invest in arrangements that are meant to support individuals in finding a balance between work and family life. The twofold goal of our article was to establish the level of work-family conflict in the member states of the European Union by gender and to analyze to what extent different arrangements at the organizational level as well the public level help to reduce this. Using the European Working Conditions Survey supplemented with macro-data on work-family facilities and the economic and emancipation climate in a country, we performed multilevel analyses. Our findings show that the intensity of work-family conflict does not vary widely in EU28. In most countries, men experience less work-family conflict than women, although the difference is small. Caring for children and providing informal care increases perceived work-life conflict. The relatively small country differences in work-family conflict show that different combinations of national facilities and organizational arrangements together can have the same impact on individuals; apparently, there are several ways to realize the same goal of work-family conflict reduction.
topic work-family conflict
work-family facilities
comparative study
european union
gender
url https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/16/22/4419
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