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Childfree employees: The effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree-friendly culture on organisational commitment

Organisations are increasingly introducing flexible workplace practices and policies such as flextime and flexplace to increase the commitment of their employees and assist them to balance the competing work-life demands. At first, they were designed to create a family-friendly workplace for working...

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Main Author: Jacobs, Albertus Abraham
Other Authors: Bagraim, Jeffrey
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Organisational Psychology 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Jacobs, Albertus Abraham
author2 Bagraim, Jeffrey
author_browse Bagraim, Jeffrey
Jacobs, Albertus Abraham
author_facet Bagraim, Jeffrey
Jacobs, Albertus Abraham
author_sort Jacobs, Albertus Abraham
collection Thesis
description Organisations are increasingly introducing flexible workplace practices and policies such as flextime and flexplace to increase the commitment of their employees and assist them to balance the competing work-life demands. At first, they were designed to create a family-friendly workplace for working mothers and, later, also for working fathers. Childfree employees (i.e., those with no children) were not included. There is little research on the impact of these work arrangements on the organisational commitment of these childfree employees. This dissertation tries to close that gap. Childfree employees (N = 134) working in over a dozen South African organisations participated in a self-report quantitative survey. It seems that the availability and use of flexible work arrangements did not significantly predict their organisational commitment. Organisational commitment related to only one dimension of the childfree-friendly culture scale, equal work expectations. Perceived organisational support (POS) mediated the relationship between organisational commitment and equal work expectations.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:52:32.888Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Organisational Psychology
publisherStr Organisational Psychology
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25015 Childfree employees: The effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree-friendly culture on organisational commitment Jacobs, Albertus Abraham Bagraim, Jeffrey Jaga, Ameeta Organisational Psychology Organisations are increasingly introducing flexible workplace practices and policies such as flextime and flexplace to increase the commitment of their employees and assist them to balance the competing work-life demands. At first, they were designed to create a family-friendly workplace for working mothers and, later, also for working fathers. Childfree employees (i.e., those with no children) were not included. There is little research on the impact of these work arrangements on the organisational commitment of these childfree employees. This dissertation tries to close that gap. Childfree employees (N = 134) working in over a dozen South African organisations participated in a self-report quantitative survey. It seems that the availability and use of flexible work arrangements did not significantly predict their organisational commitment. Organisational commitment related to only one dimension of the childfree-friendly culture scale, equal work expectations. Perceived organisational support (POS) mediated the relationship between organisational commitment and equal work expectations. 2017-09-01T14:18:09Z 2017-09-01T14:18:09Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25015 eng application/pdf Organisational Psychology Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Organisational Psychology
Jacobs, Albertus Abraham
Childfree employees: The effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree-friendly culture on organisational commitment
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Childfree employees: The effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree-friendly culture on organisational commitment
title_full Childfree employees: The effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree-friendly culture on organisational commitment
title_fullStr Childfree employees: The effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree-friendly culture on organisational commitment
title_full_unstemmed Childfree employees: The effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree-friendly culture on organisational commitment
title_short Childfree employees: The effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree-friendly culture on organisational commitment
title_sort childfree employees the effects of flexible work arrangements and childfree friendly culture on organisational commitment
topic Organisational Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25015
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