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Variations in Negative Work-Family Spillover Among White, Black, and Hispanic American Men and Women
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Citations
48
References
2005
Year
EthnicitySocial InequalityGender DisparityRepresentative SampleParental StatusGender StudiesSociologyAfrican American StudiesWork-family SpilloverHispanic American MenFamily PsychologyNegative Work-family SpilloverWorklife BalanceWork-family InterfaceSocial SciencesFamily RelationshipsFamily Diversity
This study uses a nationally representative sample ( N = 1,761) to investigate how gender differences in negative work-family spillover vary by ethnicity (Black, White, and Hispanic) and parental status. Consistent with the authors’ hypotheses, Hispanics displayed a greater gender disparity in negative family-to-work spillover and negative work-to-family spillover than Blacks and Whites, even when controlling for gender-role attitudes. The authors also found that the relationship between ethnicity and gender on work-family spillover varied by parental status. The authors propose that the observed gender and ethnicity interactions are because of gender role and acculturation differences in the work experiences of Hispanic, Black, and White women.
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