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Work-Family in Africa Special Issue - Africa Journal of Management

  • 1.  Work-Family in Africa Special Issue - Africa Journal of Management

    Posted 10-15-2019 08:07
    Edited by Jeffrey Pollack 10-15-2019 08:07

    Posted on behalf of Guest Editors:

    • Prof Samuel Aryee, University of Surrey, UK
      Professor of Organisational Behaviour and Human Resource Management
      Email: s.aryee@surrey.ac.uk
    • Prof Jenny M Hoobler, University of Pretoria, South Africa
      Professor of Human Resource Management
      Email: jenny.hoobler@up.ac.za

    Work-Family in Africa
    Special Issue - Africa Journal of Management

    Deadlines

    Full Paper Submission Deadline (Full papers may be submitted without having previously submitted an abstract.):  31 January 2020

    Background

    Recent work-family (WF) meta-analyses have all but left out the scholarship of and about work and family intersections in Africa (Allen, French, Dumani, & Shockley, 2015; Shockley, Douek, Smith, Yu, Dumani, & French, 2017).  Yet WF research is accumulating in South Africa, Ghana, and other African nations (Hoobler & Koekemoer, 2018).  And characteristics of certain African cultures suggest that work and family may be more intertwined and family may play a larger role in work for people in African nations, as opposed to nations in the Global North (Aryee, 2005), based on higher degrees of collectivism (vs individualism) and femininity (vs masculinity).  To date, what we know about work and family in Africa has taken a somewhat piece-meal approach.  For example, new research has been performed just on entrepreneurial women in sub-Saharan Africa (Wolf & Freese, 2018), domestic workers in South Africa (Hoobler, 2016), and a new conflict measure just for South African workers (Koekemoer, Mostert, & Rothmann, 2010). We ask whether it is time to take stock of the literature as a whole.  Just as Nkomo (2011) asked if there is or can be an African way of leading, is there an Afro-centric version of work and family intersections?  Is this unique?  What can be learned from studying work and family in African contexts?

    Lest we fall prey to essentialist notions of Africa as a mono-culture, we encourage multi-level models that acknowledge ethnic, cultural, industry, and national influences on various relations and outcomes.  We encourage papers that explore tried-and-true topics such as WF conflict, enrichment, and balance, but also new ways of looking at the WF interface, especially via emic approaches such as grounded theory.  We welcome conceptual, theoretical and empirical (both qualitative and quantitative) papers that advance our understanding of work and family intersections in Africa.

    Topics include, but are not limited to:

      • Work-family conflict and/or enrichment and/or balance
    • New constructs that capture work and family intersections in Africa
    • Comparative research on WF in developing and developed nations
    • Management implications of WF intersections 
    • Multinational corporations' influence on WF management and cultural preservation in Africa
    • Ethics and CSR issues related to WF policies and interpersonal treatment
    • Technology's influence on WF for African workers
      • WF in entrepreneurship
    • Historical perspectives on WF in Africa
    • The future of WF in Africa
    • WF-focused interventions that might be appropriate for various African cultural contexts
    • Post-and anti-colonial perspectives on WF
    • Boundary/domain/role management and crossing in Africa
    • Work-family human resource practices and employee and organizational outcomes

    Africa Journal of Management

    AJOM is published by Africa Academy of Management (AFAM), an affiliate of the US-based Academy of Management.  As the first scholarly journal of AFAM, AJOM gives voice to all those who are committed to advancing management scholarship, education and practice in or about Africa, for the benefit of all of Africa. The purpose of the journal is to advance management theory, research, education, practice and service in Africa by promoting the production and dissemination of high quality and relevant manuscripts. AJOM welcomes manuscripts that develop, test, replicate or validate management theories, tools and methods with Africa as the starting point. The journal also publishes research notes, book reviews and insights, and comments and debates from readers on published papers or important management questions of the day.

    • Founding Editor I Prof Moses Kiggundu I Carleton University, Canada
    • Senior Associate Editor I Prof Bruce Lamont I Florida State University, USA

    Submission Guidelines and Process

      • AJOM operates an international double-blind peer review process.
    • Authors should refer to the AJOM website for instructions on submitting a paper.  Submission must be done via the Africa Journal of Management Editorial Manager at http://www.edmgr.com/rajm/default.aspx
    • Full manuscripts should please be submitted by January 31, 2020.

    Please direct inquiries about this special issue to the Guest Editors:
    Prof Sam Aryee: s.aryee@surrey.ac.uk
    Prof Jenny Hoobler: jenny.hoobler@up.ac.za

    Jenny M. Hoobler
    Professor and Doctoral Programmes Manager
    Department of Human Resource Management
    Faculty of Economic & Management Sciences
    University of Pretoria
    Pretoria, South Africa