从COVID-19之前到期间,父母的工作-家庭冲突发生了什么?这是澳大利亚一项纵向研究的结果

IF 1.9 Q2 SOCIOLOGY Community Work & Family Pub Date : 2023-09-13 DOI:10.1080/13668803.2023.2252159
Stacey Hokke, Shannon K. Bennetts, Jasmine Love, Liana Leach, Sharinne B. Crawford, Amanda R. Cooklin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19大流行极大地扰乱了在职父母的生活,但调查父母工作家庭冲突影响的纵向数据有限。本研究旨在(i)描述大流行之前和期间父母的工作与家庭冲突(WtFC)和家庭与工作冲突(FtWC),包括随时间的变化和稳定性,以及(ii)确定哪些父母面临不利冲突转变的风险。调查数据收集自2016年和2020年澳大利亚父母的全国队列(n = 1196)。在两个时间点检查了WtFC和FtWC水平,并将时间点之间的冲突转变分为从未、征召、逃避和慢性。研究结果表明,父母的冲突水平总体上有所缓解,但在父母冲突转变方面存在显著的个体差异,一些人被征调为高父母冲突(12%)或高父母冲突(12%),许多人报告长期高父母冲突(45%)或高父母冲突(29%)。逻辑回归分析了应征入伍和长期过渡的预测因素,性别(妇女)、社会经济(经济困难)、照料(单亲、年幼子女)和工作(自营职业、长时间工作、在家工作)不平等现象在2019冠状病毒病期间继续影响着工作与家庭界面的糟糕经历。这项研究为澳大利亚父母在COVID-19大流行之前和期间工作-家庭冲突的变化提供了证据。
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What happened to parents’ work-family conflict from before to during COVID-19? Findings from a longitudinal Australian study
The COVID-19 pandemic dramatically disrupted the lives of working parents, yet there are limited longitudinal data examining the impact on parents’ work-family conflict. This study aimed to (i) describe parents’ work-to-family conflict (WtFC) and family-to-work conflict (FtWC) before and during the pandemic, including change and stability over time, and (ii) identify which parents were at risk of adverse conflict transitions. Survey data were collected from a national cohort of Australian parents in 2016 and 2020 (n = 1196). WtFC and FtWC levels were examined at both timepoints, and conflict transitions between timepoints were classified as never, conscript, escape and chronic. Findings show that WtFC and FtWC levels eased overall, yet there was significant individual variation in parents’ conflict transitions with some conscripting into high WtFC (12%) or FtWC (12%) and many reporting chronically high WtFC (45%) or FtWC (29%). Logistic regressions examined the predictors of conscript and chronic transitions, with gender (women), socio-economic (financial difficulties), care (single parent, younger children) and job (self-employment, long work hours, working from home) inequalities continuing to shape poorer experiences at the work-family interface during COVID-19. This study contributes evidence on how work-family conflict changed for Australian parents from before to during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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4.30%
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32
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