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Working-time preferences among women: Challenging assumptions on underemployment, work centrality and work–life balance

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Article

Lamolla, Laura ; Folguera-I-Bellmunt, Conxita ; Fernández-I-Marin, Xavier

International Labour Review

2021

160

3

September

431-451

women workers ; working time ; part time employment ; underemployment ; work-life balance

Gender equality & Women

https://doi.org/10.1111/ilr.12193

English

Bibliogr.

"This article examines the working-time preferences of women working 20-hour weeks, on different, stable schedules, in manufacturing jobs. The authors conducted qualitative and quantitative research to identify worker profiles based on these women's working-time preferences and the reasons for them. Their findings add nuance to previous research by highlighting that: (1) some, but not all, of these employees can be considered underemployed; (2) working 20 hours a week does not equate to low work centrality and is compatible with working hours being experienced as meaningful; (3) some part-time women workers want to keep time for non-caring, non-working activities despite earning a low salary."

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