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This book explores the effects of shift work and non standard
working hours on family and social life. It features analysis and
case studies from an international body of researchers from Europe,
the Americas and Australia. It includes contributions from Germany,
the United States, the Netherlands, Croatia, Italy, Poland,
Australia, and Brazil, that fully examine this increasingly
prevalent, and global, issue. The book starts by introducing the
problems of work-family linkages, shift work and non-standard work
hours. Next, it details the consequences of specific features of
shift schedules, such as decreased opportunities for social
participation, family problems and negative effects on partners and
children as well as the impact of working time arrangements on
work-family conflict over time. The book then looks at the
consequences of shift work and non-standard work hours on family
members and the workers themselves, including the sleep and daytime
functioning of adolescent family members and the ways that
non-standard work schedules intersect with the particular
challenges and stresses of family responsibilities and strategies
that workers use to manage these challenges in sectors where
non-standard schedules are the norm. Last, the book considers the
role of individual differences in understanding problems of
work-family relationships, including a consideration of safety and
health at work from the perspective of gender and an examination of
the moderating role of chronotype and circadian type
characteristics on work-family conflict and work-family
facilitation among male shift workers.
This book explores the effects of shift work and non standard
working hours on family and social life. It features analysis and
case studies from an international body of researchers from Europe,
the Americas and Australia. It includes contributions from Germany,
the United States, the Netherlands, Croatia, Italy, Poland,
Australia, and Brazil, that fully examine this increasingly
prevalent, and global, issue. The book starts by introducing the
problems of work-family linkages, shift work and non-standard work
hours. Next, it details the consequences of specific features of
shift schedules, such as decreased opportunities for social
participation, family problems and negative effects on partners and
children as well as the impact of working time arrangements on
work-family conflict over time. The book then looks at the
consequences of shift work and non-standard work hours on family
members and the workers themselves, including the sleep and daytime
functioning of adolescent family members and the ways that
non-standard work schedules intersect with the particular
challenges and stresses of family responsibilities and strategies
that workers use to manage these challenges in sectors where
non-standard schedules are the norm. Last, the book considers the
role of individual differences in understanding problems of
work-family relationships, including a consideration of safety and
health at work from the perspective of gender and an examination of
the moderating role of chronotype and circadian type
characteristics on work-family conflict and work-family
facilitation among male shift workers.
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