Work-family balance and job satisfaction : the impact of family-freindly policies on attitudes of federal government employees
By: SALTZSTEIN,Alan L.
Contributor(s): TING, Yuan | SALTZSTEIN, Grace Hall.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Malden, MA : Blackwell Publishers, jul./aug. 2001Public Administration Review: PAR 61, 4, p. 452-467Abstract: We use the 1991 survey of Federal Gorvernment Employees to test a theoretical framework regarding the relationships between work and familiy demands, family-friendly policies, satisfaction with work-family balance, and job satisfaction for diverse groups of employees with different personal and family needs. We find that a variety of policies widely presumed to be "family friendly" were used to varying degrees by disparate groups of federal employees. The use of such policies had very diverse effects on both employee satisfaction with work-family balance and job satisfaction, within and across various groups of similarly situated employees. The assumptions underlying the provision of family-freindly policies and implications for the organization are examinedItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
We use the 1991 survey of Federal Gorvernment Employees to test a theoretical framework regarding the relationships between work and familiy demands, family-friendly policies, satisfaction with work-family balance, and job satisfaction for diverse groups of employees with different personal and family needs. We find that a variety of policies widely presumed to be "family friendly" were used to varying degrees by disparate groups of federal employees. The use of such policies had very diverse effects on both employee satisfaction with work-family balance and job satisfaction, within and across various groups of similarly situated employees. The assumptions underlying the provision of family-freindly policies and implications for the organization are examined
Public Administration Review PAR
July/August 2001 Volume 61 Number 4
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