Babic, Audrey
[ULg]
Stinglhamber, Florence
[UCL]
Bertrand, Françoise
[Belgian Defense, Brussels, Belgium]
Hansez, Isabelle
[ULg]
Much effort has been expended in the past decade to examine the causal relationship between work–family conflict (WFC) and negative indicators of well-being. Comparatively little is known about the effects of work–family enrichment (WFE) on well-being. Even more importantly, very few studies have examined the concomitant effects of both WFC and WFE in terms of well-being. This study aims to fill these gaps by investigating the directionality of the causal relationships between WFC, WFE, and two well-being variables (i.e., job strain and job engagement). We examined these relationships using a two-wave cross-lagged panel design. Our sample was composed of 978 workers from a Belgian Federal Public Service. Reciprocal relationships were found between WFC–job strain, WFC–job engagement, and WFE–job engagement.
Bibliographic reference |
Babic, Audrey ; Stinglhamber, Florence ; Bertrand, Françoise ; Hansez, Isabelle. Work–home interface and well-being: A cross-lagged analysis. In: Journal of Personnel Psychology, Vol. 16, no.1, p. 46-55 (2017) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/183778 |