Work-life conflict and work engagement: which drives the other? A fuzzy-set Approach
Citation
Source Title
ISSN
Faculty
School
Collection
Abstract
We employed fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) to investigate the relationship between work engagement and worklife conflict among 416 employees from five organisations. By using a set-theoretic approach, the research addresses the ‘chicken or the egg’ dilemma of whether work engagement increases work-life conflict or if work-life conflict leads to reduced work engagement. Unlike previous studies that individually analysed components of work engagement, including vigour, dedication, and absorption, using regression techniques, this study considers work engagement as a holistic configuration of these factors. The findings reveal that specific life-to-work conflict dimensions contribute to a lack of work engagement, with no evidence supporting that work engagement causes work-to-life conflict. By using fsQCA, an asymmetric technique, this study also provides empirical support that work engagement and the lack (negation) of work engagement are separate constructs rather than two sides of the same coin. Thus, their drivers can be different.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Farivar, F.; Esmaeelinezhad, O.; Richardson, Julia (2022)Internet usage for non-work activities during work hours is an increasingly common concern among management scholars and practitioners as well as for employees, particularly in relation to its impact on work-life conflict ...
-
Farivar, F.; Richardson, Julia (2020)© 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Prior research has shown that the use of Information Communication Technology (ICT) outside work hours blurs work and nonwork boundaries, exacerbates ...
-
Kismono, Gugup (2011)This research examined the relationships between job embeddedness, work-family conflict and turnover intention. It also examined the impact of gender on the relationships between these variables. While previous studies ...