6533b7dbfe1ef96bd1270a0a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The role of personality and role engagement in work-family balance

Ulla KinnunenLea PulkkinenJohanna Rantanen

subject

AgreeablenessLongitudinal studymedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologyfamily relationsDevelopmental psychologyfamily work balance0502 economics and businessOpenness to experiencePersonalityPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesBig Five personality traitsGeneral Psychologymedia_commonExtraversion and introversionPsykologia - Psychology05 social sciencesConscientiousnessNeuroticismBF1-990personalityPsychologySocial psychology050203 business & managementrole engagement

description

The relations between personality, role engagement, and a four-dimensional typology of work-family balance (WFB) were examined within a community-based sample (n = 213) derived from the Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Personality and Social Development (JYLS). The typology was formed based on both work-family conflict (WFC) and enrichment (WFE) experiences. The profiles of personality and role engagement differentiated the four WFB types – Beneficial, Harmful, Active, and Passive types. The Beneficial type (low WFC, high WFE; 48.4%) was characterized by low neuroticism, high agreeableness and high conscientiousness. The opposite was observed for the Harmful type (high WFC, low WFE; 8.9%), which was also characterized by low family investment. In turn, high extraversion and high work and family investment characterized the Active type (high WFC, high WFE; 16.4%), whereas low extraversion and openness to experience as well as low work investment characterized the Passive type (low WFC, low WFE; 26.3%). Thus, rather than just being a unidimensional construct ranging from balance to imbalance, it is confirmed that WFB can also be seen as manifesting itself in multiple types, which are linked to meaningful differences in personality traits and role engagement.

https://researchportal.tuni.fi/en/publications/0b8c73ec-7851-44ff-8a51-731e402f22de