Tensions Between Work and Home: Job Quality and Working Conditions in the Institutional Contexts of Germany and Spain

Good jobs can generate capabilities that allow employees to avoid tensions between work and family/home. Following the conceptual framework of Amartya Sen, we examine how job-related demands and resources are related to the level of interference, as well as satisfaction with managing work and home i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social politics 2011-07, Vol.18 (2), p.232-268
Hauptverfasser: Drobnic, S., Guillen Rodriguez, A. M.
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container_title Social politics
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creator Drobnic, S.
Guillen Rodriguez, A. M.
description Good jobs can generate capabilities that allow employees to avoid tensions between work and family/home. Following the conceptual framework of Amartya Sen, we examine how job-related demands and resources are related to the level of interference, as well as satisfaction with managing work and home in Spanish and German employees, using three different large-scale European surveys: European Quality of Life Survey and two waves of the European Social Survey. We find that long working hours systematically increase tensions between work and home, as do time pressure, job-related stress, and working hard. Job control or autonomy at work, which is hypothesized to expand individuals' capabilities and agency, tends to increase work–home interference rather than alleviate it. Family responsibilities and household demands do not seem relevant to the tensions employees experience at the work–home interface. This also holds true for women, which is a surprising result in view of the “double burden” hypothesis. Employed mothers in Germany and Spain are a select group of women, as combining employment with raising children in conservative–corporatist and conservative–familialist states may be particularly problematic. Thus while the institutional contexts of Germany and Spain curtail women's ability to reconcile employment and parenthood, the mothers (and fathers) who are employed do not experience significantly higher levels of work–family/home tensions than nonparents.
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source MEDLINE; PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Political Science Complete
subjects Employees
Employment
Employment - economics
Employment - history
Employment - legislation & jurisprudence
Employment - psychology
Europe
Family
Family - ethnology
Family - history
Family - psychology
Family Conflict
Family Health - ethnology
Federal Republic of Germany
Females
Germany
Germany - ethnology
History of medicine
History, 20th Century
History, 21st Century
Households
Institutions
Job evaluation
Job Satisfaction
Life Style - ethnology
Life Style - history
Mothers
Parenting - ethnology
Parenting - history
Parenting - psychology
Quality of Life
Quality of Life - legislation & jurisprudence
Quality of Life - psychology
Satisfaction
Spain
Spain - ethnology
Stress
Stress, Psychological - economics
Stress, Psychological - ethnology
Stress, Psychological - history
Surveys
Women
Women workers
Work
Work Environment
Work life balance
Working conditions
Working Mothers
Working Women
title Tensions Between Work and Home: Job Quality and Working Conditions in the Institutional Contexts of Germany and Spain
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