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Support for part-time work as a channel to female employment: the moderating effects of national gender empowerment and labour market conditions

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Article
H

Stavrou, Eleni T. ; Casper, Wendy ; Ierodiakonou, Christiana

International Journal of Human Resource Management

2015

26

5-6

March

688-706

gender ; human resources management ; part time employment ; women workers ; womens empowerment ; work-life balance

EU countries

Personnel management

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2014.971847

English

Bibliogr.

"Using a multi-source data set collected across eight European countries, this article examines how characteristics of both the organizational environment and the larger national context relate to the organizational-level variable of women's employment. Our study revealed that, in countries that were high in gender empowerment measure (GEM), establishments that were more supportive of part-time work options also employed a higher proportion of women. One reason for this relationship may be that in high-GEM countries offering part-time employment is a way for an organization to signal its support for work–life balance, something that makes it more attractive to women. In countries with low GEM, an establishment's greater support for part-time work was associated with employing a greater proportion of women only when establishments experienced recruitment difficulties. Key differences in gender empowerment between countries are discussed."

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