Purpose -The paper explores the concept of availability, both empirically and theoretically, in the context of three Swedish organisations, and identifies the structural influences on availability patterns for work and family.Design/methodology/approach -The paper is based on quantitative case studies using employer records and a questionnaire sent to all employees in three different organisations. Multivariate descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression are used to illustrate and analyse patterns of availability for work and family.
Findings -The descriptive data demonstrate the influence of the organisational context and type of production process, as well as gender, on availability patterns. Patterns of work availability appeared to differ across the organisations, to a greater extent than patterns of family availability, which were highly gendered. The logistic regression results indicated that: occupational level was a significant influence on both temporal and spatial availability patterns across the organisations; gender was the most significant influence on time spent on household work and part-time working for parents with young children; age of employees and age of employees' children were the most significant factors influencing the use of time off work for family.Research limitations/implications -Case studies cannot answer the question what would happen in other cases, or in the labour market as a whole. More extensive quantitative research would be needed to make empirical generalisations possible. Qualitative research would be needed to establish whether and how employees are able to make use of different availability patterns to improve their work-life balance.Originality -The concept of availability is a new way of trying to capture and analyse tensions in people's everyday lives as they try to manage multiple demands.Key words: Availability, family, gender, occupation, working time, work-life balance.
Type of paper: Research paper 2
IntroductionThis article draws on empirical findings from three case study organisations in Sweden to argue that the concept of availability, both temporal and spatial, can contribute to developing an analytical framework for comparative work-life balance research across different organisational and institutional settings. The article explores the different patterns of availability for work and family amongst employees in a mill, a bank and a college and identifies the influence of gender, occupation, parental responsibilities and organisational context on these patterns.The first section introduces the concept of availability and suggests why this concept offers a potential analytical framework for exploring work-life balance issues from an employee perspective. The second section provides an overview of general patterns of availability for work and family in Sweden. The research methods are then presented. The data analysis is presented in five sub-sections. The first three of these sub-sections in turn present the findings from the three c...