Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- PART ONE RISK AND RESILIENCE
- PART TWO PEERS AND PARENTS
- PART THREE WORK AND FAMILY
- 6 Mothers and Fathers at Work: Implications for Families and Children
- 7 The Family-Child-Care Mesosystem
- PART FOUR DISCORD AND DIVORCE
- PART FIVE NEW AND EXTENDED FAMILY FORMS
- PART SIX CONCLUSIONS AND COMMENTARIES
- Index
- References
6 - Mothers and Fathers at Work: Implications for Families and Children
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- PART ONE RISK AND RESILIENCE
- PART TWO PEERS AND PARENTS
- PART THREE WORK AND FAMILY
- 6 Mothers and Fathers at Work: Implications for Families and Children
- 7 The Family-Child-Care Mesosystem
- PART FOUR DISCORD AND DIVORCE
- PART FIVE NEW AND EXTENDED FAMILY FORMS
- PART SIX CONCLUSIONS AND COMMENTARIES
- Index
- References
Summary
Mothers' and fathers' employment is of fundamental importance to families and children in two distinct ways. First, parents' work connects families to the larger social system. Because of their choices of jobs and workplaces, mothers and fathers are exposed to trends in the local, national, and global economy; to economic and social policy in such areas as international trade, parental leave, health insurance coverage, and social welfare; and to technology and technological change, including computerization, high speed communication, and robotics. In a more immediate way, mothers' and fathers' work situations connect them to a work culture that encourages certain values and behaviors and discourages others, to work-based friendships and social networks and, sometimes, to certain child care arrangements.
A second way in which parents' employment is important for families and children is that, through the nature of the work that parents do and the workplace in which those work activities take place, parents are exposed to a set of occupational conditions that have implications for how they interact with and socialize their children. Some occupational conditions, such as how much time a parent spends on the job or when those work hours are scheduled, are important because they shape the parent's availability to the child. Others, such as the extent to which the job offers the worker autonomy and self-direction (or encourages conformity) or the extent to which the parent experiences work-related pressures and strains, affect the child in indirect ways; that is, they influence the parent's own development or psychological well-being in ways that have implications for parenting.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Families CountEffects on Child and Adolescent Development, pp. 135 - 154Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
References
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