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The critical role of co-worker involvement: An extended measure of the workplace environment to support work–life balance

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  • Bradley, Lisa
  • McDonald, Paula
  • Cox, Stephen

Abstract

This paper extends the work of Thompson, Beauvais, and Lyness (1999, Journal of Vocational Behavior, 54, 392–415) on work–family culture by considering the role co-workers play. The proposed extended measure encompasses non-work spheres beyond the family as it has been established that much of the extant research does not include a large part of the workforce – those without childcare responsibilities (Kelliher, Richardson & Boiarintseva [2019, Human Resource Management Journal, 29, 101]). The extended measure constitutes Thompson et al.'s (1999) three original dimensions plus two additional dimensions: co-worker involvement (support and consequences) and gender expectations. Two quantitative studies confirmed that the extended measure is robust for different types of workers (part- and full-time, males and females). The co-worker dimensions were significantly associated with several outcome measures; however, the gender expectation dimensions added little additional variance in relation to employee outcomes. The results support the inclusion of co-workers as an important dimension of the workplace environment that supports work and life balance.

Suggested Citation

  • Bradley, Lisa & McDonald, Paula & Cox, Stephen, 2023. "The critical role of co-worker involvement: An extended measure of the workplace environment to support work–life balance," Journal of Management & Organization, Cambridge University Press, vol. 29(2), pages 304-325, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:jomorg:v:29:y:2023:i:2:p:304-325_8
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