Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
887141 Journal of Vocational Behavior 2011 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Within the work–family literature little is known about the work–family challenges and opportunities faced by families that have one or more children with autism spectrum disorder. However, it has been consistently demonstrated that parents of children with autism spectrum disorder are at a higher risk of experiencing a host of negative outcomes. Using a qualitative design, within grounded theory, the present study sheds light on the needs, experiences, and challenges that parents of children with autism spectrum disorder face and also offers insight into ways to expand the scope of work–family research in this area. The present research provides evidence of how the family domain can greatly impact experiences and decisions made in the work domain for families with special needs. The present research adds to the small but growing literature examining the interplay between home and work life for families with special needs and demonstrates that this is an important research domain in need of additional conceptual and empirical consideration.

Research highlights► Working parents of children with autism report maintaining domain boundaries where family is prioritized over work. ► These parents actively engage in flexible and non-traditional work arrangements to manage work–family demands. ► They experience high levels of work–family conflict with limited opportunities for recovery. ► Only a small percentage of parents report positive family supportive organizational perceptions.

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