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Field: Work-Family Balance Challenges

Generational differences: revisiting generational work values for the new millennium

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Karen Wey Smola, Charlotte D. Sutton

Journal: Journal of Organizational Behavior
Year: 2002
Citations: 1640

Abstract As we enter the new millennium and face the entrance of another generation of workers into the changing world of work, managers are encouraged to deal with the generational differences that appear to exist among workers. This paper revisits the issue of generational differences and the caus...

Social SciencesBusiness, Management and AccountingOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
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Does ‘Fear of COVID-19’ trigger future career anxiety? An empirical investigation considering depression from COVID-19 as a mediator

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Md. Shahed Mahmud, Mesbah Uddin Talukder, Sk. Mahrufur Rahman

Journal: International Journal of Social PsychiatryYear: 2020Citations: 254

BACKGROUND: Due to the outbreak of COVID-19, the mental health of the people all around the world is severely disrupted. AIM: The purpose of this study is to identify whether 'Fear of COVID-19' impacted on future workforces' career anxiety at the first place and whether depression from COVID-19 has ...

Social SciencesSafety ResearchCareer Development and DiversityOpen Access
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The new gender essentialism – domestic and family ‘choices’ and their relation to attitudes<sup>1</sup>

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Rosemary Crompton, Clare Lyonette

Journal: British Journal of SociologyYear: 2005Citations: 251

This paper critically examines two strands within contemporary gender essentialism--that is, the argument that men and women are fundamentally different and that it is this 'difference' that explains the continuing social and material differences between the sexes. The first strand we examine is Hak...

Social SciencesPolitical Science and International RelationsSocial Policy and Reform Studies
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The Effect of Emotional Intelligence on Turnover Intention and the Moderating Role of Perceived Organizational Support: Evidence from the Banking Industry of Vietnam

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Hà Nam Khánh Giao, Bùi Nhất Vương, Đào Duy Huân, Hasanuzzaman Tushar et al.

Journal: SustainabilityYear: 2020Citations: 198

The objective of this study is to investigate the impact of emotional intelligence on turnover intention, noting the mediating roles of work-family conflict and job burnout as well as the moderating effect of perceived organizational support. Survey data collected from 722 employees at banks in Viet...

Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceWork-Family Balance ChallengesOpen Access
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Addressing work‐life balance challenges of working women during COVID‐19 in Bangladesh

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Mahi Uddin

Journal: International Social Science JournalYear: 2021Citations: 182

Abstract Working women face various challenges regarding work‐family balance due to societal, cultural, family, and gender norms. These challenges have become more difficult since the emergence of COVID‐19 worldwide. This qualitative research addresses work‐family issues of working women in the dist...

Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceWork-Family Balance ChallengesOpen Access
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Work-Life Balance, Job Satisfaction, and Job Performance of SMEs Employees: The Moderating Role of Family-Supportive Supervisor Behaviors

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Perengki Susanto, Mohammad Enamul Hoque, Taslima Jannat, Bamy Emely et al.

Journal: Frontiers in PsychologyYear: 2022Citations: 167

Even though studies on work-life balance and family-supportive supervisor behaviors are prevalent, there are few studies in the SME setting, and the implications are yet unexplained. Thus, the study examines the effect of work-life balance on the performance of employees in SMEs, along with the medi...

Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceWork-Family Balance ChallengesOpen Access
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Intimate relationships and changing patterns of money management at the beginning of the twenty‐first century<sup>1</sup>

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Carolyn Vogler, Michaela Brockmann, Richard D. Wiggins

Journal: British Journal of SociologyYear: 2006Citations: 150

Drawing on British data from two annual sweeps of the ISSP eight years apart in 1994 and 2002, for modules focusing on 'Family and Changing Gender Roles', this paper examines the extent to which changes in women's labour market participation, changing ideologies/discourses of gender and changing for...

Social SciencesGender StudiesGender, Labor, and Family Dynamics
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Who intermarries in Britain? Explaining ethnic diversity in intermarriage patterns

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Raya Muttarak, Anthony Heath

Journal: British Journal of SociologyYear: 2010Citations: 144

This paper investigates trends, patterns and determinants of intermarriage (and partnership) comparing patterns among men and women and among different ethnic groups in Britain. We distinguish between endogamous (co-ethnic), majority/minority and minority/minority marriages. Hypotheses are derived f...

Social SciencesDemographyFamily Dynamics and Relationships
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Supervisor Support and Organizational Commitment: The Role of Work–Family Conflict, Job Satisfaction, and Work–Life Balance

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A. K. M. Mominul Haque Talukder

Journal: Journal of Employment CounselingYear: 2019Citations: 136

Building on conservation of resources theory and social exchange theory, the author examined the relationship between supervisor support and organizational commitment through work–family conflict, work–life balance, and the job satisfaction of employees working in the financial sector in Australia. ...

Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceWork-Family Balance Challenges
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Excellent and gender equal? Academic motherhood and ‘gender blindness' in Norwegian academia

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Cecilie Thun

Journal: Gender Work and OrganizationYear: 2019Citations: 129

This article explores Norwegian female academics' experiences with academic motherhood in an organizational perspective. A main finding is that academia as an organization is greedy, uncertain, and has ‘blind spots' that reveal gender bias related to gender and parental status, especially mothers. B...

Social SciencesGender StudiesGender Diversity and InequalityOpen Access
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Perceptions of High-Involvement Work Practices, Person-Organization Fit, and Burnout: A Time-Lagged Study of Health Care Employees

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Steven Kilroy, Patrick C. Flood, Janine Bosak, Denis Chênevert

Journal: Human Resource ManagementYear: 2016Citations: 103

Previous research demonstrates that high-involvement work practices (HIWPs) may be associated with burnout (emotional exhaustion and depersonalization); however, to date, the process through which HIWPs influence burnout is not clear. This article examined the impact of HIWPs on long-term burnout (e...

Social SciencesBusiness, Management and AccountingOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementOpen Access
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The Palgrave Handbook of Global Social Problems

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Rajendra Baikady, S. M. Sajid, Jarosław Przeperski, Varoshini Nadesan et al.

Year: 2021Citations: 102
Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceWork-Family Balance ChallengesOpen Access
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Racial discrimination, ethnicity and work stress

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Emma Wadsworth, Kamaldeep Dhillon, Christine Shaw, Kamaldeep Bhui et al.

Journal: Occupational MedicineYear: 2006Citations: 99

BACKGROUND: Previous research has suggested higher work stress among minority ethnic workers. AIMS: To determine levels of work stress in three ethnic groups, consider the contribution of racial discrimination to the groups' profiles of occupational and demographic associations with stress, and asse...

Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceRacial and Ethnic Identity ResearchOpen Access
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Intrahousehold allocation and gender relations : new empirical evidence

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Agnes Quisumbing

Year: 1999Citations: 96

The paper reviews recent theory and empirical evidence testing unitary versus collective models of the household. In contrast to the unitary model the collective model posits that individuals within households have different preferences and do not pool their income. Moreover the collective model pre...

Social SciencesGender StudiesGender, Labor, and Family Dynamics
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Job satisfaction and intention to quit: A bibliometric review of work-family conflict and research agenda

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Jinnatul Raihan Mumu, Tahani Tahmid, Md. Abul Kalam Azad

Journal: Applied Nursing ResearchYear: 2020Citations: 89

This paper, for the first time, performs a bibliometric review on work-family conflict focusing on job satisfaction and intention to quit since the inception of this concept in 1994. For analysis and graphical presentation, bibliometrix package in R software and VOSviewer software are used. Total 14...

Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceWork-Family Balance Challenges
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