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Do households live the family model they prefer? Household's work patterns across European policy regimes
[journal article]
Abstract
Studies have investigated the equalizing effect of childcare provision and parental leave schemes on gendered work patterns. However, as the relationship between policies and individual time allocations to paid work is complex and challenging to empirically assess, previous research has clarified si... view more
Studies have investigated the equalizing effect of childcare provision and parental leave schemes on gendered work patterns. However, as the relationship between policies and individual time allocations to paid work is complex and challenging to empirically assess, previous research has clarified single aspects of this complexity. The present study theoretically and empirically combines a household perspective by considering the work behaviours of two partners within one household (i.e. a household’s lived family model) with a comparative approach to systematically analyse relationships between specific policy designs and households’ paid work patterns in a large sample. The findings imply that extensive childcare policies are systematically related to an egalitarian household organization, mostly among those with small children. This association can be observed across households with varying levels of egalitarian norms. Conversely, the findings suggest that the current design of parental leave policies in the 21 European countries does not allow for a true assessment of the potential of leave schemes to influence the within-household division of labor.... view less
Keywords
ISSP; family; gender relations; gender-specific factors; inequality; unemployment; social norm; social policy; child care; parental leave; family situation; family policy; division of labor
Classification
Family Sociology, Sociology of Sexual Behavior
Women's Studies, Feminist Studies, Gender Studies
Free Keywords
family economics; gender inequality; part-time employment; ISSP 2012
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 1421-1443
Journal
Socio-Economic Review, 21 (2023) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1093/ser/mwac023
ISSN
1475-1461
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed