Publication | Closed Access
When can employees have a family life? The effects of daily workload and affect on work-family conflict and social behaviors at home.
483
Citations
44
References
2007
Year
Quality Of LifeLongitudinal ExaminationSocial WorkOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesFamily LifeFamily RelationshipsHealth SciencesFamily DomainWork-family ConflictDaily WorkloadSocial ImpactDaily SurveysWorkplace ConflictWork-related StressSociologyFamily PsychologyWorklife BalanceWork-family Interface
This article presents a longitudinal examination of antecedents and outcomes of work-to-family conflict. A total of 106 employees participating in an experience-sampling study were asked to respond to daily surveys both at work and at home, and their spouses were interviewed daily via telephone for a period of 2 weeks. Intraindividual analyses revealed that employees' perceptions of workload predicted work-to-family conflict over time, even when controlling for the number of hours spent at work. Workload also influenced affect at work, which in turn influenced affect at home. Finally, perhaps the most interesting finding in this study was that employees' behaviors in the family domain (reported by spouses) were predicted by the employees' perceptions of work-to-family conflict and their positive affect at home.
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