2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2010.00767.x
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Work Characteristics and Parent‐Child Relationship Quality: The Mediating Role of Temporal Involvement

Abstract: This study investigated whether the amount and nature of parent‐child time mediated the association between parental work characteristics and parent‐child relationship quality. We based hypotheses on the conflict and enrichment approaches, and we tested a path model using self‐collected data on 1,008 Dutch fathers and 929 Dutch mothers with school‐aged children. Longer working hours and less work engagement were associated with less parent‐child time and longer working hours, more restrictive organizational no… Show more

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Cited by 97 publications
(102 citation statements)
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References 42 publications
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“…Due to long working hours, they lack time to pay attention to their children (Roeters et al, 2010), and the adjustment hardships they encounter often leave them emotionally unavailable to their children. These factors have a detrimental effect on their parenting.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Due to long working hours, they lack time to pay attention to their children (Roeters et al, 2010), and the adjustment hardships they encounter often leave them emotionally unavailable to their children. These factors have a detrimental effect on their parenting.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Long working hours, being paid by the hour, a confining organizational culture, and stress make parents' work more demanding and impair their ability to pay attention to their children (Roeters, van der Lippe, & Kluwer, 2010). Most participants in the study were engaged in non-professional work, earned minimal wages paid on an hourly basis, and were afraid of losing their source of income.…”
Section: Difficulties In Fulfilling Parental Responsibility In Immigrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…12,15 Most research on parents' work and time with their children shows that longer work hours are associated with less parent-child time. 16 The correlational designs of this research, however, mean that conclusions about causal associations between work involvement or workplace conditions and parent-child shared time cannot be drawn. One exception is a study of a workplace initiative in a white collar organization that improved mothers' and fathers' perceptions of adequacy of time with their children; however, this study did not assess parents' actual time with children.…”
Section: What This Study Addsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Clearly, in addition to having direct influences on their children, parents also have indirect influences on them by way of their crossover impacts on their partners (Barnett & Gareis, 2007;Bass, Butler, Grzywacz, & Linney, 2009;Bryant & Zick, 1996). This is especially the case for dual-earner couples with children who share work and family experiences and their mutual task of child rearing (Barnett & Gareis, 2007;Roeters et al, 2010). Crossover is the term used to describe the dyadic/interpersonal process that occurs when one person's experiences influence another person in the same social environment (Bakker, Demerouti, & Dollard, 2008;Westman, 2001).…”
Section: Work-family Dynamics and Parentingmentioning
confidence: 99%