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Employee work–life balance outcomes in Ireland: a multilevel investigation of supervisory support and perceived organizational support
137
Citations
73
References
2012
Year
Quality Of LifeWorkplace PsychologyOrganizational SupportHuman Resource ManagementBalance ProgrammesOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesWork AdjustmentWorker Well-beingWork-life BalanceHierarchical Linear ModellingEmployee AttitudeManagement DevelopmentManagementWork AttitudeHr ManagerJob SatisfactionMultilevel InvestigationSupervisory SupportEmployee InvolvementSociologyBusinessWorklife BalanceWork-family Interface
Abstract This article examines how employee perceptions of supervisory and organizational support for work–life balance, in addition to the number of work–life balance programmes available, predict a number of work–life balance outcomes including role conflict, job satisfaction, family satisfaction and turnover intentions in a sample of large private and public sector organizations in Ireland. The attitudes of HR managers towards work–life balance programmes are also explored. To account for the nested structure of the data, analyses were conducted using hierarchical linear modelling. We found that perceptions of work–life supportiveness as measured at the HR manager and immediate supervisor levels affect employee uptake of work–life programmes, employee work–life balance outcomes and turnover intentions. Keywords: HR managerimmediate supervisorIrelandmultilevelwork–familywork–life balance
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