Predicting Work-Life Conflict: Types and Levels of Enacted and Preferred Work-Nonwork Boundary (In)Congruence and Perceived Boundary Control

被引:10
作者
Mellner, Christin [1 ]
Peters, Pascale [2 ]
Dragt, Maria Johanna [2 ]
Toivanen, Susanna [3 ]
机构
[1] Stockholm Univ, Dept Psychol, Stockholm, Sweden
[2] Nyenrode Business Univ, Strateg Human Resource Management, Utrecht, Netherlands
[3] Malardalen Univ Coll, Div Sociol, Vasteras, Sweden
来源
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY | 2021年 / 12卷
关键词
boundary crossing; boundary management strategies; boundaryless work; inter-domain transitions; work-life balance; FAMILY CONFLICT; LONGITUDINAL EXAMINATION; POLYNOMIAL REGRESSION; SMARTPHONE USE; GENDER; SEGMENTATION; MANAGEMENT; HEALTH; FIT; QUESTIONNAIRE;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2021.772537
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
In 2020, everyday life changed dramatically for employees worldwide as a result of the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, where an estimated 558 million employees started working from home. The pandemic, therefore, marks a fundamental shift of individuals' work-nonwork boundaries, which can impact work-life conflict. In particular, the interplay between individuals' enacted boundaries (degree to which they separate/segment or blend/integrate work-nonwork), preferred boundaries (degree of preferred segmentation or integration of work-nonwork), and perceived control over work-nonwork boundaries, may relate to work-life conflict. This study, the first to the best of our knowledge, examines whether different types and levels of work-nonwork boundary (in)congruence matter for work-life conflict, and whether perceived boundary control moderates these relationships. Boundary (in)congruence represents the degree of (mis)fit between enacted and preferred segmentation or integration. Several types of (in)congruence are distinguished: "segmentation congruence" (enacting and preferring segmentation); "integration congruence" (enacting and preferring integration); "intrusion" (enacting integration but preferring segmentation) and "distance" (enacting segmentation but preferring integration). Data from 1,229 managers working in public and private organizations in Sweden was analyzed using polynomial regression analysis with response surface modeling and moderation analysis in SPSS Process. Findings showed that "integration congruence" was related with higher work-life conflict than "segmentation congruence." Moreover, a U-shaped relationship between incongruence and work-life conflict was found: the more incongruence, the more work-life conflict. Specifically, "intrusion" was related to higher work-life conflict than "distance." Finally, boundary control mitigated the effect of incongruence (especially "intrusion") on work-life conflict. From our findings, we may conclude that work-life conflict is impacted differently depending on the type and level of boundary (in)congruence. Particularly enacted and/or preferred integration may be problematic when it comes to work-life conflict, rather than just (in)congruence per se. Moreover, boundary control can be viewed as a key factor in combating work-life conflict, especially among individuals who enact integration, but prefer segmentation. Taken together, our study contributes new and substantial knowledge by showing the importance for research and HRM-policies that take into account different types and levels of boundary (in)congruence, as these are associated with different levels of work-life conflict, which, in turn, are moderated by boundary control.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 43 条
[31]   Exploring the impact of technostress on the work-life boundary of UK academics during the coronavirus pandemic [J].
Mordi, Chima ;
Akanji, Babatunde ;
Ajonbadi, Hakeem .
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & PEOPLE, 2025,
[32]   Learning to inhabit the liquid liminal world of work: An auto-ethnographic visual study of work-life boundary transitions [J].
Izak, Michal ;
Shortt, Harriet ;
Case, Peter .
MANAGEMENT LEARNING, 2023, 54 (02) :198-222
[33]   Work-life conflict and associations with work- and nonwork-related factors and with physical and mental health outcomes: a nationally representative cross-sectional study in Switzerland [J].
Haemmig, Oliver ;
Gutzwiller, Felix ;
Bauer, Georg .
BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2009, 9
[34]   Age-related differences in the use of boundary management tactics when teleworking: Implications for productivity and work-life balance [J].
Scheibe, Susanne ;
Retzlaff, Lena ;
Hommelhoff, Sabine ;
Schmitt, Antje .
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 97 (04) :1330-1352
[35]   A study of job insecurity and life satisfaction in COVID-19: the multilevel moderating effect of perceived control and work-life balance programs [J].
Lee, Meng-Hsiu ;
Tsai, Hung-Yu .
JOURNAL OF MENS HEALTH, 2022, 18 (01)
[36]   Work-Life Conflict among US Long-Haul Truck Drivers: Influences of Work Organization, Perceived Job Stress, Sleep, and Organizational Support [J].
Hege, Adam ;
Lemke, Michael K. ;
Apostolopoulos, Yorghos ;
Whitaker, Brian ;
Sonmez, Sevil .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2019, 16 (06)
[37]   Family boundary characteristics, work-family conflict and life satisfaction: A moderated mediation model [J].
Qiu, Lin ;
Fan, Jinyan .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 50 (05) :336-344
[38]   Boundary-less and care-full: women academics' perception and negotiation of work-life domains during the COVID-19 work from home era at an Australian regional university [J].
Hands, Karen ;
Casey, Sarah ;
Innes, Peter ;
Ashford, Theresa ;
Blake, Jacqueline .
GENDER AND EDUCATION, 2024, 36 (03) :248-265
[39]   Expanding role boundary management theory: How volunteering highlights contextually shifting strategies and collapsing work-life role boundaries [J].
Cruz, Disraelly ;
Meisenbach, Rebecca .
HUMAN RELATIONS, 2018, 71 (02) :182-205
[40]   How Positive Activities Shape Emotional Exhaustion and Work-Life Balance: Effects of an Intervention via Positive Emotions and Boundary Management Strategies [J].
Althammer, Sarah Elena ;
Woehrmann, Anne Marit ;
Michel, Alexandra .
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH SCIENCE, 2024, 8 (01) :43-70