Key practices of equality within long parental leaves

Autor(en)
Cornelia Schadler, Eva-Maria Schmidt, Irene Rieder, Ulrike Zartler, Rudolf Richter
Abstrakt

The birth of a child often reinforces an unequal division of employment and care work among heterosexual couples. Parental leave programmes that foster long leaves tend to increase this inequality within couples. However, by investigating a particularly long parental leave system, we show that specific practices enable parents to share care work equally. Our ethnographic study includes interviews with heterosexual couples, observations in prenatal classes and information material available to parents. Specific sets of practices - managing economic security, negotiating employment, sharing information with peers and feeding practices - involved parents who shared care work equally and parents who divided care work unequally. Contingent on specific situated practices, the arrangement of care work shifted in an equal or unequal direction. Even within long parental leaves, equality between parents was facilitated when economic security was provided through means other than income, when work hours were flexible, mothers had a close relationship to work, information on sharing equally was available and children were bottle-fed. Consequently, an equal share of care work is not the effect of solely structural, individual, cultural or normative matters, but of their entanglement in practices.

Organisation(en)
Institut für Soziologie, HR Services
Journal
Journal of European Social Policy
Band
27
Seiten
247-259
Anzahl der Seiten
13
ISSN
0958-9287
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0958928716685688
Publikationsdatum
01-2017
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
504014 Gender Studies, 504011 Familienforschung
Schlagwörter
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Allgemeine Sozialwissenschaften, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Link zum Portal
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/938e371f-2157-4620-aae8-04b3deabcec2