Expanding the Boundaries of Work-Family Research 2013
DOI: 10.1057/9781137006004_13
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Times are Changing: Gender and Generation at Work and at Home in the USA

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Cited by 158 publications
(197 citation statements)
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“…However, given the fact that more and more women are in full-time work, this may be a barrier that is affecting men just as much, as more dual-income families are now required to share parental and family responsibilities. According to the National Study of the Changing Workforce (Galinsky, Aumann, & Bond, 2009), employed fathers are spending more time with children today than they did three decades ago and are taking on more overall responsibility for the care of their children, limiting their time to do other things. Considering this, health professionals need to understand this shift in family responsibility when developing physical activity programs for men and develop initiatives that fit into the context of their daily lives rather than just their leisure time.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, given the fact that more and more women are in full-time work, this may be a barrier that is affecting men just as much, as more dual-income families are now required to share parental and family responsibilities. According to the National Study of the Changing Workforce (Galinsky, Aumann, & Bond, 2009), employed fathers are spending more time with children today than they did three decades ago and are taking on more overall responsibility for the care of their children, limiting their time to do other things. Considering this, health professionals need to understand this shift in family responsibility when developing physical activity programs for men and develop initiatives that fit into the context of their daily lives rather than just their leisure time.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the greedy institutions of work and family demand increasing time, workfamily conflict has grown, with men now reporting similar rates of conflict as women (Aumann, Galinsky, & Matos, 2011;Galinsky, Aumman, & Bond, 2011). Workers increasingly express a desire for fewer time and place restrictions on work (Moen, Lam, Ammons, & Kelly, 2013), but a mismatch persists between the needs of today's labor force and the structure and expectations of today's workplace.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, compared to the 1960s, average family size has decreased, more births are to unmarried women, more children are experiencing divorce, and more married mothers are working (Sayer, Bianchi, & Robinson, 2004). Attitudes toward appropriate parenting behavior have shifted; according to the Families and Work Institute, in 2008, 39% of employees reported agreeing that it is better if men earn the money and women take care of the home and children, which is a decline from 64% in 1977 (Galinsky, Aumann, & Bond, 2009). Ideology surrounding both mothering and fathering behaviors has undergone significant shifts, although mothers are still responsible for more daily caregiving activities.…”
Section: Mothering Fathering and Parentingmentioning
confidence: 99%