Working-time flexibility and autonomy: a European perspective on time adequacy
European Journal of Industrial Relations
2015
21
3
September
259-274
arrangement of working time ; comparison ; flexible working time ; gender ; working time
Germany ; Netherlands ; Sweden ; United Kingdom
Working time and leave
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959680114543604
English
Bibliogr.
"This study examines the effect of working-time flexibility and autonomy on time adequacy, using the 2010 European Working Conditions Survey. It addresses gender differences and institutional contexts in the UK, Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands, and reveals that time arrangements have gendered meanings. While working-time flexibility and autonomy are positively related to time adequacy for women, for men they tend to imply overtime and work intensification. Furthermore, working-time regimes also shape time arrangements. In the UK, employees have time adequacy primarily when they work fixed hours, while in the Netherlands, employees profit most from working-time autonomy. Moreover, unlike in Germany and the UK, men and women in the Netherlands and Sweden benefit more equally from working-time flexibility and autonomy."
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