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https://doi.org/10.20377/jfr-792

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Modern fathers' dilemma of work-family reconciliation: Findings from the German Youth Institute Survey AID:A II

[journal article]

Li, Xuan
Zerle-Elsäßer, Claudia

Abstract

Objective: This study investigated how work and family demands and resources relate to fathers' perceived work-family conflicts. Background: Increasing expectations for family involvement and the lingering centrality of employment in the male life course pose challenges for fathers to combine differ... view more

Objective: This study investigated how work and family demands and resources relate to fathers' perceived work-family conflicts. Background: Increasing expectations for family involvement and the lingering centrality of employment in the male life course pose challenges for fathers to combine different life domains. However, most studies on work-family interface continue to focus on mothers and examine work-to-family conflict and family-to-work conflicts separately. Method: First, we used cluster analysis to identify a typology of four groups, each with different manifestations of work-to-family and family-to-work conflict. We then analyzed the relationship between fathers' group membership in this typology and a number of relevant work and family demands and resources using multinomial logistic regression on a sample of 5,226 German nuclear families with at least one child under 18. Results: Our findings revealed that the greatest proportion of fathers (38.2%) reported being primarily pressured from work (=work-to-family conflict predominates), 19.8% primarily from the family (=family-to-work conflict predominates), but another 13.4% reported feeling conflicted in both directions; only 28.6% of fathers reported being more or less free of conflicts. Results of multinominal logistic regression suggested that long work hours, intrusive work demands, and long commute associated with fathers’ work-to-family conflict or dual conflicts. The higher the fathers' weekday time investment in childcare and the better the perceived couple and family relationship, the lower the likelihood of fathers' experience of work-to-family and dual conflict, although the likelihood of family-to-work conflict is unaffected. In addition, a higher family income and having a non-working partner negatively associated with fathers' perceived work-family conflicts. Conclusion: These findings have strong implications for family-supportive practices and policies that are yet to focus on fathers in their difficult position between work and family obligations.... view less

Keywords
work-family balance; father; family policy; gainful employment; gender role; family

Classification
Family Sociology, Sociology of Sexual Behavior

Free Keywords
work-family conflict; family roles

Document language
English

Publication Year
2023

Page/Pages
p. 103-123

Journal
JFR - Journal of Family Research, 35 (2023)

ISSN
2699-2337

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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Home  |  Legal notices  |  Operational concept  |  Privacy policy
© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.