Changes at the Intersection of Work and Family, Volume 1

Organizational and Worker Perspectives

Diane F Halpern editor Heidi R Riggio editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:SAGE Publications Inc

Published:2nd Oct '06

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Changes at the Intersection of Work and Family, Volume 1 cover

The largest social change in the last 50 years has been the increase in the number of women, especially mothers of young children, in the formal work force. The May 2006 and June 2006 volumes of American Behavioral Scientist look at how this powerful transformation has impacted the venerable foundations of work and family, and reflect on the changes needed in organizational practices, social and public policy, families, and society in general to adapt to the changing 21st century workforce.

Changes at the Intersection of Work and Family: Organizational and Worker Perspectives, Volume 1 (May 2006), edited by Diane F. Halpern and Heidi R. Riggio, focuses on organizational and worker perspectives. Many studies have shown that there is a substantial and practical return-on-investment for employers that adopt and commit to policies that help employees better manage the needs of both work and family, including fewer missed days of work, fewer "come late" or "leave early" days, reduced employee turnover, improved morale, and a better commitment to the employer.  Volume 1 emphasizes topics such as the need for improved work-life policies, successful and promising public policy approaches, long-term work-life case studies from IBM, the dual-earner 60-hour work week, work-family and obesity and other health issues, the real and perceived negative consequences of taking advantage of family-friendly policies, the differences between male and female caregivers, and a whole-life approach to managing work and family.

Changes at the Intersection of Work and Family: Family Perspectives, Volume 2 (June 2006), edited by Heidi R. Riggio and Diane F. Halpern, highlights family perspectives and issues such as working parents′ expanding need for child care, after-school care, elder care, and medical leave.  The six articles in this volume examine how policymakers and organizations can help maximize working families′ health, productivity and happiness. 

Volume 2 covers subjects such as maternal employment and healthy child and young adult development, how working affects mothers′ self-identity and other positive factors, the stress of parents coping with after-school child care, why community programs and support such as after-school programs are so necessary to working families, and how dual-earning households mutually influence each others retirement planning.

The same important point is made in all of the articles in both...

ISBN: 9781412942119

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 230g

124 pages