ABSTRACT

There are many lessons to be learned about work-family interaction. It is clear that some people have learned how to combine work and family in ways that are mutually supporting--at least much of the time--and some employers have created work environments and policies that make positive interdependence of these two spheres more likely to occur. This book discusses measures of work-family, conflict, policies designed to reduce conflict, comparisons with other industrialized nations, and reasons why family-friendly work-policies have not been adopted with enthusiasm. The purpose is to consider a broad range of topics that pertain to work and family with the goal of helping employers and working families understand the work-life options that are available so they can make choices that offer returns-on-investments to employers, families, and society at large that are consistent with personal and societal values.

This book brings together a superb panel of experts from different disciplines to look at work and family issues and the way they interact. Part I is an overview--with a brief discussion by a psychologist, economist, and a political scientist--each of whom provide their own interpretation of how their discipline views this hybrid field. Part II considers the business case of the question of why employers should invest in family-friendly work policies, followed by a section on the employer response to work family interactions. Families are the focus of the Part IV, followed by a look at children--many of whom are at the heart of work and family interaction.

part 1|24 pages

Integrating the Demands of Work and Family

chapter 1|7 pages

From Balance to Interaction

Why the Metaphor Is Important

part 2|39 pages

The Business Case or “Why Should my Firm Invest in Family-Friendly Work Policies?”

chapter 4|15 pages

Work–Family Balance

Does the Market Reward Firms That Respect It?

part 3|50 pages

How Employers Respond to the Challenge of Work–Family Demands

chapter 5|3 pages

Corporate Responsibilities

chapter 6|11 pages

Sitting at the Corporate Table

How Work–Family Policies Are Really Made

chapter 7|15 pages

Balancing Work and Family Demands in the Military

What Happens When Your Employer Tells You to Go to War?

chapter 8|16 pages

Understanding Burnout

Work and Family Issues

part 4|57 pages

Working Families

chapter 9|17 pages

Home to School to Work—Transitions for African Americans

Eliminating Barriers to Success

chapter 10|16 pages

The Limits of Connectivity

Technology and 21st-Century Life

chapter 11|21 pages

Dual-Earner Couples

Good/Bad for Her and/or Him?

part 5|92 pages

The Children

chapter 13|21 pages

Maternal and Dual-Earner Employment and Children's Development

Redefining the Research Agenda

chapter 14|18 pages

Children's Perspectives of Employed Mothers and Fathers

Closing the Gap Between Public Debates and Research Findings

chapter 15|14 pages

Imagining the Future

A Dialogue on the Societal Value of Care