Who moved my boundary? Strategies adopted by families working from home
With the increase of remote work after the COVID-19 pandemic, it can be expected that soon a great number of households will consist of more than one teleworker. This raises the question of how to manage work and nonwork boundaries for the collective of household members who work from home. To bette...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of vocational behavior 2023-06, Vol.143, p.103866-103866, Article 103866 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | With the increase of remote work after the COVID-19 pandemic, it can be expected that soon a great number of households will consist of more than one teleworker. This raises the question of how to manage work and nonwork boundaries for the collective of household members who work from home. To better understand the adjustment to collective work from home, we examined the experiences of 28 dual-income households with school-age children residing in five countries. In doing so, we found specific strategies that families used to manage boundaries between two or more household members' work, learning, and home domains. We identified four strategies to define boundaries in the collective (i.e., repurposing the home space, revisiting family members' responsibilities, aligning family members' schedules, and distributing technology access and use) and five strategies to apply boundaries to accommodate the collective (i.e., designating an informal boundary governor, maintaining live boundary agreements, increasing family communication, incentivizing/punishing boundary respect/violation, and outsourcing). Our findings have theoretical and practical implications for remote work and boundary management.
•We extend work-nonwork boundary management scholarship to a collective level.•We highlight ways to manage boundaries for the family as a whole.•We identify strategies to manage boundaries between multiple household members’ work and nonwork domains.•We enhance the understanding of adjustment to pandemic-induced work-from-home. |
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ISSN: | 0001-8791 1095-9084 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jvb.2023.103866 |