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Original Articles

Crossing the borders: the relationship between boundary management, work–family enrichment and job satisfaction

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Abstract

Building upon Boundary Theory, the present study aims at investigating boundary management as a predictor of work-to-family enrichment and, in turn, of job satisfaction. We conceptualize boundary management both as an individual (preferences of an employee) as well as a contextual variable (perceived supplies of a workplace), both with respect to the two dimensions permeability (psychological boundary) and flexibility (physical boundary). In a survey of 222 employees with at least one child at home, we assessed employees' permeability and flexibility preferences, perceived permeability and flexibility supplies of the workplace, work-to-family enrichment and job satisfaction. Regression analysis showed a strong positive association between employees' permeability preferences, work-to-family enrichment and job satisfaction and between perceived flexibility supplies of the workplace, work-to-family enrichment and job satisfaction. Work-to-family enrichment mediated the relationship between permeability preferences and job satisfaction. Furthermore, work-to-family enrichment mediated the relationship between perceived flexibility supplies and job satisfaction. Theoretical and practical implications of the results will be discussed.

Notes

1. In the CFA, we modeled enrichment as second-order factor, comprising three subdimensions (capital, affective and developmental enrichment).

2. We additionally conducted all analyses by controlling, first, for a participant's current mood state while answering the survey and, second, for trait negative job-related affect in addition to trait positive job-related affect in order to handle the common method bias that might be caused by a participant's affect (Podsakoff et al., Citation2003). Specifically, we assessed the current affective state with one item (‘How do you feel at the moment?’). This item had to be answered on a five-point Likert scale from 1 (very good) to 5 (very bad). Trait negative job-related affect was measured with the 10 items from the PANAS (Watson et al., Citation1988). Participants were asked to report on a five-point scale, ranging from 1 (not at all) to 5 (fully), how they generally feel regarding their job (sample items are ‘upset’ and ‘irritable’). Including these control variables did not change the results.

3. All results remained the same without control variables.

4. The respective results can be ordered from the first author.

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