Role salience and support as moderators of demand/conflict relationships in China


Autoria(s): Chang, Artemis; Chen, Shu-Chen; Chi, Shu-Cheng Steve
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

This study examined the effects of role demand on both work–family conflict and family–work conflict, and the moderating effects of role salience and support on these relationships. Based on 391 dual-career (managerial and blue-collar employees) couples from a Taiwanese company in China, the results of this survey study showed clear gender differences in the patterns of relationships observed. For men, the most important demands that negatively impacted on work–family conflict were frequency of overtime and frequency of socializing for work purposes (yingchou), and supervisory support buffered the negative impact of frequent overtime. For women however, strong supervisory support and low work role salience were more important for reducing work–family conflict, and there was no significant main effect found for any of the role demand factors. Furthermore, women with high work role salience were more likely to feel the impact of yingchou on work–family conflict. In the family domain, the most influential demand for men was hours spent on household tasks, but for women, it was the frequency of family-related leave. Interestingly, males reported higher family role salience than females and spouse support intensified rather than buffered the positive impact of hours spent on household tasks on family–work conflict for males.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/62835/

Publicador

Routledge

Relação

DOI:10.1080/1359432X.2013.821739

Chang, Artemis, Chen, Shu-Chen, & Chi, Shu-Cheng Steve (2014) Role salience and support as moderators of demand/conflict relationships in China. European Journal of Work & Organizational Psychology, 23(6), pp. 859-874.

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Management

Palavras-Chave #150308 International Business #150311 Organisational Behaviour #China #Role Salience #Supervisor Support #Spouse Support #Work-family Conflict
Tipo

Journal Article