Episodic Work-Family Conflict and Strain: A Dynamic Perspective

Given rising work and family demands in our society for both men and women, the experience of work-family conflict is commonplace. Work-family conflict occurs when the demands of work or family make it difficult to meet the demands of the alternate domain. A sizeable body of research has est...

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Main Author: French, Kimberly A.
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7399
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8596&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-85962019-10-04T05:05:18Z Episodic Work-Family Conflict and Strain: A Dynamic Perspective French, Kimberly A. Given rising work and family demands in our society for both men and women, the experience of work-family conflict is commonplace. Work-family conflict occurs when the demands of work or family make it difficult to meet the demands of the alternate domain. A sizeable body of research has established work-family conflict and its nomological network. Despite decades of research, we have yet to form a precise understanding of when work-family conflicts occur and what happens when a conflict arises. The current research addresses these questions using an experience sampling, episodic approach. Two primary research questions are addressed. First, I used border and boundary theory to identify when work-family conflict episodes are likely to occur. Second, I used stressor-strain and allostatic load theories to examine what happens with regard to psychological, physiological, and behavioral strain following an episodic work-family conflict over time. The results suggest work-family conflict occurs when individuals transition in between work and family domains. Further, family-to-work conflict tends to occur in the morning, while work-to-family conflict tends to occur in the afternoon. Fatigue showed significant reactivity at the time of a family-to-work conflict and recovered in the following time point. Unhealthy eating also showed a sleeper pattern, such that unhealthy eating increased at the end of the day, following a work-to-family conflict. Unexpectedly, fatigue decreased at the time of a family-to-work conflict, indicating family-to-work conflict may be a restorative, rather than taxing. Post-hoc analyses showed some evidence that work-to-family conflict accumulation is associated with increased strain over the course of three days. Again, results suggest family-to-work conflict accumulation may reduce, rather than increase, strain. Implications for the theoretical relationship between work-family conflict and strain, as well as border/boundary theory are discussed. In addition, practical implications for flexible work initiatives and episodic research design are considered. 2017-11-07T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7399 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8596&context=etd Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons work-family conflict transition strain time allostatic load Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic work-family conflict
transition
strain
time
allostatic load
Psychology
spellingShingle work-family conflict
transition
strain
time
allostatic load
Psychology
French, Kimberly A.
Episodic Work-Family Conflict and Strain: A Dynamic Perspective
description Given rising work and family demands in our society for both men and women, the experience of work-family conflict is commonplace. Work-family conflict occurs when the demands of work or family make it difficult to meet the demands of the alternate domain. A sizeable body of research has established work-family conflict and its nomological network. Despite decades of research, we have yet to form a precise understanding of when work-family conflicts occur and what happens when a conflict arises. The current research addresses these questions using an experience sampling, episodic approach. Two primary research questions are addressed. First, I used border and boundary theory to identify when work-family conflict episodes are likely to occur. Second, I used stressor-strain and allostatic load theories to examine what happens with regard to psychological, physiological, and behavioral strain following an episodic work-family conflict over time. The results suggest work-family conflict occurs when individuals transition in between work and family domains. Further, family-to-work conflict tends to occur in the morning, while work-to-family conflict tends to occur in the afternoon. Fatigue showed significant reactivity at the time of a family-to-work conflict and recovered in the following time point. Unhealthy eating also showed a sleeper pattern, such that unhealthy eating increased at the end of the day, following a work-to-family conflict. Unexpectedly, fatigue decreased at the time of a family-to-work conflict, indicating family-to-work conflict may be a restorative, rather than taxing. Post-hoc analyses showed some evidence that work-to-family conflict accumulation is associated with increased strain over the course of three days. Again, results suggest family-to-work conflict accumulation may reduce, rather than increase, strain. Implications for the theoretical relationship between work-family conflict and strain, as well as border/boundary theory are discussed. In addition, practical implications for flexible work initiatives and episodic research design are considered.
author French, Kimberly A.
author_facet French, Kimberly A.
author_sort French, Kimberly A.
title Episodic Work-Family Conflict and Strain: A Dynamic Perspective
title_short Episodic Work-Family Conflict and Strain: A Dynamic Perspective
title_full Episodic Work-Family Conflict and Strain: A Dynamic Perspective
title_fullStr Episodic Work-Family Conflict and Strain: A Dynamic Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Episodic Work-Family Conflict and Strain: A Dynamic Perspective
title_sort episodic work-family conflict and strain: a dynamic perspective
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7399
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8596&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT frenchkimberlya episodicworkfamilyconflictandstrainadynamicperspective
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