A review of work–family research in Confucian Asia

The objective of this chapter is to review work-family research conducted in Confucian Asia. Confucianism is a school of philosophy that is based on the ideas of Confucius, an ancient Chinese social philosopher. Confucianism has had profound impact on the culture in East and Southeast Asian socie...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cho, Eunae, Choi, Ye Eun
Other Authors: Shockley, Kristen M.
Format: Book Chapter
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142934
_version_ 1811689270440624128
author Cho, Eunae
Choi, Ye Eun
author2 Shockley, Kristen M.
author_facet Shockley, Kristen M.
Cho, Eunae
Choi, Ye Eun
author_sort Cho, Eunae
collection NTU
description The objective of this chapter is to review work-family research conducted in Confucian Asia. Confucianism is a school of philosophy that is based on the ideas of Confucius, an ancient Chinese social philosopher. Confucianism has had profound impact on the culture in East and Southeast Asian societies (Neville, 2000). As a code of conduct, Confucian values have shaped various aspects of individual and social lives of people in the region. In this chapter, Confucian Asia refers to China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan. We begin by highlighting some aspects of Confucianism that are deemed important for the work-family interface. First, Confucianism emphasizes five principal relationships that define the role and proper social position for each individual; fulfilling the responsibilities and duties for one’s position is important to achieve social hierarchy and maintain harmony (Confucius, 1983). Of relevance, the husband and wife are prescribed to have a separate function in a family such that the husband is primarily responsible for financial support whereas the wife is responsible for tending the home and children. Second, Confucianism views a family, rather than an individual, as the fundamental unit of society; family is an interdependent unit, in which members are highly involved with each other’s life. The centrality of family positions fulfilling family responsibility at the center of everyone's social and economic roles. As a means to financially support family, work is often viewed as more important than leisure and as instrumental to family welfare (Redding, 1990). Lastly, Confucianism values diligence, persistence, and loyalty (Chan, 1996). The work ethic imbued with Confucianism is manifested in expectations for long work hours (Kang & Matusik, 2014) and performance evaluation practice that emphasize face-time (Won, 2005).
first_indexed 2024-10-01T05:45:26Z
format Book Chapter
id ntu-10356/142934
institution Nanyang Technological University
language English
last_indexed 2024-10-01T05:45:26Z
publishDate 2020
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format dspace
spelling ntu-10356/1429342020-07-14T07:22:20Z A review of work–family research in Confucian Asia Cho, Eunae Choi, Ye Eun Shockley, Kristen M. Shen, Winny Johnson, Ryan C. School of Social Sciences Social sciences::General Work-family Interface Systematic Review The objective of this chapter is to review work-family research conducted in Confucian Asia. Confucianism is a school of philosophy that is based on the ideas of Confucius, an ancient Chinese social philosopher. Confucianism has had profound impact on the culture in East and Southeast Asian societies (Neville, 2000). As a code of conduct, Confucian values have shaped various aspects of individual and social lives of people in the region. In this chapter, Confucian Asia refers to China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan. We begin by highlighting some aspects of Confucianism that are deemed important for the work-family interface. First, Confucianism emphasizes five principal relationships that define the role and proper social position for each individual; fulfilling the responsibilities and duties for one’s position is important to achieve social hierarchy and maintain harmony (Confucius, 1983). Of relevance, the husband and wife are prescribed to have a separate function in a family such that the husband is primarily responsible for financial support whereas the wife is responsible for tending the home and children. Second, Confucianism views a family, rather than an individual, as the fundamental unit of society; family is an interdependent unit, in which members are highly involved with each other’s life. The centrality of family positions fulfilling family responsibility at the center of everyone's social and economic roles. As a means to financially support family, work is often viewed as more important than leisure and as instrumental to family welfare (Redding, 1990). Lastly, Confucianism values diligence, persistence, and loyalty (Chan, 1996). The work ethic imbued with Confucianism is manifested in expectations for long work hours (Kang & Matusik, 2014) and performance evaluation practice that emphasize face-time (Won, 2005). Accepted version 2020-07-14T02:19:39Z 2020-07-14T02:19:39Z 2018 Book Chapter Cho, E., & Choi, Y. E. (2018). A review of work-family research in Confucian Asia. In K. M. Shockley, W. Shen, & R. C. Johnson (Eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of the Global Work-Family Interface (pp. 371-385). doi:10.1017/9781108235556.020 9781108235556 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142934 10.1017/9781108235556.020 371 385 en The Cambridge Handbook of the Global Work-Family Interface © 2018 Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved. This book is made available with permission of Cambridge University Press. application/pdf Cambridge University Press
spellingShingle Social sciences::General
Work-family Interface
Systematic Review
Cho, Eunae
Choi, Ye Eun
A review of work–family research in Confucian Asia
title A review of work–family research in Confucian Asia
title_full A review of work–family research in Confucian Asia
title_fullStr A review of work–family research in Confucian Asia
title_full_unstemmed A review of work–family research in Confucian Asia
title_short A review of work–family research in Confucian Asia
title_sort review of work family research in confucian asia
topic Social sciences::General
Work-family Interface
Systematic Review
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/142934
work_keys_str_mv AT choeunae areviewofworkfamilyresearchinconfucianasia
AT choiyeeun areviewofworkfamilyresearchinconfucianasia
AT choeunae reviewofworkfamilyresearchinconfucianasia
AT choiyeeun reviewofworkfamilyresearchinconfucianasia