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Why perceived organizational and supervisory family support is important

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dc.contributor.author Demirtas, O
dc.contributor.author Arslan, A
dc.contributor.author Karaca, M
dc.date.accessioned 2022-03-28T14:03:14Z
dc.date.available 2022-03-28T14:03:14Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11616/59017
dc.description.abstract The relationship between perceived organizational support and its work-outcomes were usually based on social exchange theories. By keeping the social exchange framework in mind, this study additionally draws on affective infusion model and on functionalist perspective to study moderating role of cognitive emotion regulation (CER) in relationships among perceived organizational-supervisory family support (POFS-PSFS) and organizational identification, psychological contract breach, and work-family conflict (WFC). Results show that perceived POFS and PSFS are positively related to organizational identification, negatively related to WFC, and psychological contract breach. Employees with higher levels of CER tend to identify themselves more with their organizations and less with WFC (at Time 2) than do employees with low levels of CER in response to perceived organizational family support (at Time 1). Furthermore, employees with higher levels of CER tend to identify themselves more with their organizations, and have less psychological contract breach, and WFC (at Time 2) than do employees with low levels of CER in response to perceived supervisory family support (at Time 1). In the end, the implications, limitations, and future research directions were also discussed.
dc.source REVIEW OF MANAGERIAL SCIENCE
dc.title Why perceived organizational and supervisory family support is important
dc.title for organizations? Evidence from the field


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