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Work‐family conflict: An exploration of the differential effects of a dependent child's age on working parents

Colette Darcy (School of Business, National College of Ireland, Dublin, Ireland)
Alma McCarthy (Department of Management, J.E. Cairnes Graduate School of Business and Public Policy, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)

Journal of European Industrial Training

ISSN: 0309-0590

Article publication date: 4 September 2007

4790

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this article is to explore the impact of life cycle stage, specifically parenting stage, on work‐family conflict among working parents to determine whether discernible differences are evident among those individuals at the early stage of their parenting cycle compared with those with older children.

Design/methodology/approach

An explorative study was undertaken among parents employed within the Irish hotel sector. The questionnaire was distributed to 22 hotels and 76 individuals who reported having children responded. A number of measures were used to assess the impact which a number of factors, namely job stress, job involvement, managerial support and colleague support, may have on working parents' work‐life conflict. Correlation and regression analysis are performed to test the hypotheses proposed.

Findings

The research findings provide initial support for the possibility that the factors influencing work‐family conflict differ for each of the parenting groups analysed. For all parents with dependent children it was found that job involvement, job stress and colleague support all have predictive powers in terms of explaining the antecedents of work‐family conflict.

Research limitations/implications

The findings provide a compelling case for the need to begin to address work‐family conflict in a more holistic manner, examining both the immediate and long‐term consequences for employees with childcare responsibilities.

Practical implications

The ability to design and implement specific, targeted responses to employees' work‐life needs is an area where HRD can make a real and significant contribution. Strategic HRD has the potential to reduce the misappropriation of organisational resources by ensuring a focused and targeted response, thereby minimising the fruitless pursuit of “one size fits all” approaches to this complex issue.

Originality/value

The paper seeks to lay the first key foundation‐stones in framing the debate in relation to work‐life balance in terms of the entire working lives of individuals and not just specific snapshots during the course of that employment. The paper is critical of current organisational thinking in relation to employees' work‐life balance needs and challenges HRD professionals to begin to examine this important and complex issue in a more holistic manner.

Keywords

Citation

Darcy, C. and McCarthy, A. (2007), "Work‐family conflict: An exploration of the differential effects of a dependent child's age on working parents", Journal of European Industrial Training, Vol. 31 No. 7, pp. 530-549. https://doi.org/10.1108/03090590710820042

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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