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Journal Article

Citation

Lambert EG, Qureshi H, Frank J. Int. J. Police Sci. Manag. 2016; 18(2): 87-103.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1461355716641972

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Existing research has suggested that work?family conflict is associated with a host of negative consequences. One dimension of work?family conflict, known as strain-based conflict, occurs when workplace problems negatively impact the quality of home life. Unfortunately, there has been limited research on strain-based conflict among police officers, especially those in non-Western nations, and the existing research has failed to examine the relationships between a full range of relevant workplace characteristics and strain-based work-family conflict. Using survey data from Indian police officers, this study examined the association of time-based conflict, behavior-based conflict, role conflict, role ambiguity, role overload, role underload, perceived dangerousness of the job, supervision, views on training, job autonomy, and job variety with strain-based conflict. This study's findings indicate that time-based conflict, behavior-based conflict, role conflict, and role overload were associated with higher levels of strain-based conflict in an ordinary least squares regression analysis. Job autonomy and views of training were associated with lower levels of strain-based conflict in a multivariate analysis. The findings also suggest a need to further study the impact of how work environment variables affect work-family conflict, particularly strain-based conflict, among police officers across a variety of nations.


Language: en

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