Taking dynamics and their origins seriously: work-family conflict trajectories and their gendered antecedents in work and nonwork support
Taking dynamics and their origins seriously: work-family conflict trajectories and their gendered antecedents in work and nonwork support
Containing work-family conflict is crucial for sustainable careers. This study examines work-to-family (WtFC) and family-to-work (FtWC) conflict trajectories, deploying the longitudinal Work, Family, and Health Survey on US healthcare and IT employees. It identifies five distinct profiles for 1843 individuals across four waves (T1–T4) spanning 18 months: Stable High, Stable Fairly-low, Stable Low, Increasing, and Decreasing. Stability in WtFC/FtWC is common, aligning with Dynamic Equilibrium Theory, but notable changes are also apparent, supporting Conservation of Resources Theory. The effect of initial levels (T1) of, and early changes (T1–T2) in, work and nonwork support is then examined. Individuals with higher initial support levels or larger early increases are more likely to belong to Stable Low, Stable Fairly-low, or Decreasing profiles than Stable High or Increasing ones. However, gender moderates these relationships, with support generally having stronger effects on women's membership in WtFC profiles and men's in FtWC profiles. The findings partially align with traditional gender roles typically linking women with caregiving and men with breadwinning, but also suggest shifting gender roles, with women valuing their careers and men actively engaging in family.
Gender, Nonwork support, Trajectory, Work support, Work-family conflict
Ye, Genping
f70a492d-6a2b-4193-928d-65264c20e914
Veliziotis, Michalis
e43806b3-fdb5-494b-a624-04a5227d2fad
Vernon, Guy
07d124b8-c898-476e-b342-bd2bacc4107d
13 November 2025
Ye, Genping
f70a492d-6a2b-4193-928d-65264c20e914
Veliziotis, Michalis
e43806b3-fdb5-494b-a624-04a5227d2fad
Vernon, Guy
07d124b8-c898-476e-b342-bd2bacc4107d
Ye, Genping, Veliziotis, Michalis and Vernon, Guy
(2025)
Taking dynamics and their origins seriously: work-family conflict trajectories and their gendered antecedents in work and nonwork support.
Journal of Vocational Behavior, 163, [104177].
(doi:10.1016/j.jvb.2025.104177).
Abstract
Containing work-family conflict is crucial for sustainable careers. This study examines work-to-family (WtFC) and family-to-work (FtWC) conflict trajectories, deploying the longitudinal Work, Family, and Health Survey on US healthcare and IT employees. It identifies five distinct profiles for 1843 individuals across four waves (T1–T4) spanning 18 months: Stable High, Stable Fairly-low, Stable Low, Increasing, and Decreasing. Stability in WtFC/FtWC is common, aligning with Dynamic Equilibrium Theory, but notable changes are also apparent, supporting Conservation of Resources Theory. The effect of initial levels (T1) of, and early changes (T1–T2) in, work and nonwork support is then examined. Individuals with higher initial support levels or larger early increases are more likely to belong to Stable Low, Stable Fairly-low, or Decreasing profiles than Stable High or Increasing ones. However, gender moderates these relationships, with support generally having stronger effects on women's membership in WtFC profiles and men's in FtWC profiles. The findings partially align with traditional gender roles typically linking women with caregiving and men with breadwinning, but also suggest shifting gender roles, with women valuing their careers and men actively engaging in family.
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taking dynamics and their origins seriously work-family conflict trajectories and their gendered antecedents
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 8 September 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 September 2025
Published date: 13 November 2025
Keywords:
Gender, Nonwork support, Trajectory, Work support, Work-family conflict
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 506066
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506066
ISSN: 0001-8791
PURE UUID: 090000af-46a3-4c4f-a407-e3e2724a0432
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Date deposited: 28 Oct 2025 17:43
Last modified: 05 Dec 2025 02:58
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Author:
Genping Ye
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