Work and Family Interface in the International Career Context 2015
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-17647-5_11
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A Framework for Work-Life Management in Multinational Corporations

Abstract: Work-life issues are a substantial concern for managers and employees in many multinational corporations (MNCs), as there are many challenges related to the need for MNCs to balance global policy guidelines with responsiveness to regional and local differences. Drawing on recent empirical advances, we offer a framework and a set of broad research questions to guide future scholarship in work-life management in MNCs. The framework identifies important external and organisational factors that influence the HRM f… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 88 publications
(118 reference statements)
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“…Third, concerning the social support expatriates receive, many studies show that, in comparison to AEs, SIEs relie less on their companies for providing services since they have more limited or no access to pre‐departure training, to benefits and compensation packages for their expatriation, to career progression and repatriation plans as well as organizational policies to help them balance their life domains (Andersen et al ., 2012; De Cieri and Bardoel, ; Mäkelä and Suutari, ) or to deal with structural and career constraints such as difficulties to obtain the necessary visas and work permits in their host countries (Al Ariss and Özbilgin, ). Given their lack of organizational support, SIEs face more risk, encounter more insecurity and job instability (Richardson and Mallon, ), and have a weaker company attachment or embeddedness than AEs (Reiche et al ., ).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, concerning the social support expatriates receive, many studies show that, in comparison to AEs, SIEs relie less on their companies for providing services since they have more limited or no access to pre‐departure training, to benefits and compensation packages for their expatriation, to career progression and repatriation plans as well as organizational policies to help them balance their life domains (Andersen et al ., 2012; De Cieri and Bardoel, ; Mäkelä and Suutari, ) or to deal with structural and career constraints such as difficulties to obtain the necessary visas and work permits in their host countries (Al Ariss and Özbilgin, ). Given their lack of organizational support, SIEs face more risk, encounter more insecurity and job instability (Richardson and Mallon, ), and have a weaker company attachment or embeddedness than AEs (Reiche et al ., ).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, multinational corporations often struggle to transfer WF policies catering to a "western" workforce to meet the needs of workforces in diverse or developing economies (Lewis et al, 2007). Country-specific cultural norms, societal trends, and laws create a need for distinction between employee WF support policies in different countries (De Cieri and Bardoel, 2015;Riva, 2016). Asian and western countries for example significantly differ in employee experiences associated with family relationships and well-being (Tsai and Chen, 2017).…”
Section: Practical Contributionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Legislative differences may in part reflect cultural differences, and those differences could similarly drive a wedge between the effectiveness of any specific work-life policy or practice across nations. For this reason, Von Glinow, Drost, and Teagarden (2002) Bardoel, 2015;Poster & Prasad, 2005).…”
Section: Contextual/institutional Versus Organizationalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Work-life management per se is increasingly acknowledged as an important aspect of HRM (De Cieri & Bardoel, 2015;McCarthy, Darcy, & Grady, 2010;Ryan & Kossek, 2008). Work-life management practices refer to those practices in organizations that are introduced by firms to facilitate employees' ability to meet work and non-work demands (McCarthy et al, 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%