Artículo de revista
Acculturation and individualism as predictors of work-family conflict in a diverse workforce
Fecha
2013Registro en:
Human Resource Management, Volumen 52, Issue 5, 2018, Pages 741-769
1099050X
00904848
10.1002/hrm.21559
Autor
Olson, Kristine J.
Huffman, Ann H.
Leiva, Pedro I.
Culbertson, Satoris
Institución
Resumen
Ethnic and cultural diversity is an increasing reality in the US workplace. The current study highlights the importance of acknowledging the culturally heterogeneous nature of ethnic groups, and the need to focus on social identity characteristics such as cultural values when assessing group differences. We demonstrate that cultural values (i.e., individualism) contribute to employees' experiences of work-family conflict beyond the effects of ethnicity. Specifically, we introduce a model informed by social identity theory that explains why acculturation is related to work-family conflict. The model was tested with a sample of 309 employed Caucasian and Hispanic Americans. An empirical test of our model provides evidence that individualism mediates the relationship between language- and social-based acculturation and work-family conflict, even when controlling for ethnicity. Additionally, alternative models further reveal that the effects of acculturation and individualism contribute to