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Workplace flexibility has been a topic of considerable interest to researchers, practitioners, and public policy advocates as a tool to help individuals manage work and family roles. In this study, meta‐analysis is used to clarify what is known about the relationship between flexible work arrangements and work–family conflict by deconstructing the flexibility construct. We found that the direction of work–family conflict (work interference with family vs. family interference with work) and the specific form of flexibility (flextime vs. flexplace; use vs. availability) make a difference in the effects found. Overall, the significant effects were small in magnitude.
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Allen et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dadcc04e9a02dbaa684bd2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/peps.12012
Tammy D. Allen
University of South Florida
Ryan C. Johnson
Brigham Young University
Kaitlin M. Kiburz
University of Waterloo
Personnel Psychology
University of South Florida
City University of New York
The Graduate Center, CUNY
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