Abstract
This article represents the 17th in a series of reviews of the vocational behavior literature. The review includes research related to life-span, developmental perspectives of career behavior, and the reciprocal interactions that occur between work and nonwork domains. Life-span research continues to be focused primarily on early career stages, particularly on exploration and initial career choice, with lesser attention to career behavior in middle and later adulthood. Research regarding work-nonwork interface, although relatively recent in nature, has grown considerably in complexity and in volume. A greater integration of these two lines of investigation is necessary for a more complete understanding of life-span career, family, and individual development.
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