Coping with family-to-work conflict: the role of informal work accommodations to family.

Scott J Behson
Author Information
  1. Scott J Behson: Silberman College of Business Administration, Farleigh Dickinson University, Teaneck, New Jersey 07666, USA. Behson@fdu.edu

Abstract

The purposes of this study are to (a) construct and validate a scale measuring informal work accommodations to family (IWAF), (b) test the moderating effect of IWAF on the relationship between family-to-work conflict and work stress, and (c) examine the relationships between IWAF and a set of relevant antecedents and coping constructs. Two survey-based nonexperiments are used to accomplish these goals. Results indicate that (a) the IWAF scale is reliable, content valid, and meaningfully correlated to work-family and coping constructs; (b) more frequent use of IWAF attenuates the positive relationship between family-to-work conflict and stress; and (c) IWAF, along with organizational policies and climates, may be important for workplace stress management. Implications for research and practice are discussed.

MeSH Term

Adaptation, Psychological
Adult
Conflict, Psychological
Family
Female
Humans
Male
Pilot Projects
Social Adjustment
Social Responsibility
Surveys and Questionnaires
Work

Word Cloud

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