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Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
European Societies (2021) 23 (S1): S576–S588.
Published: 19 February 2021
Abstract
View articletitled, Who cares when care closes? Care-arrangements and parental working conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany
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for article titled, Who cares when care closes? Care-arrangements and parental working conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany
ABSTRACT This study examines the short-term consequences for care-arrangements among working parents, who were affected by the closure of schools and institutional childcare as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany. By applying multinomial logistic regression models to novel data from two panel surveys of the National Educational Panel Study and its supplementary COVID-19 web survey, the study finds that mothers continue to play a key role in the care-arrangements during the first months of the pandemic. Moreover, the results illustrate the importance of working conditions, especially the possibility of remote work for the altered care-arrangements. Overall, the findings point towards systematic gender differences in the relationship between parental working conditions and the care-arrangements.
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
European Societies (2019) 21 (1): 158–180.
Published: 01 January 2019
Abstract
View articletitled, Change in the gender division of domestic work after mothers or fathers took leave: exploring alternative explanations
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for article titled, Change in the gender division of domestic work after mothers or fathers took leave: exploring alternative explanations
ABSTRACT This study investigates how the durations of childcare leaves taken by mothers and fathers in Germany relate to the gender division of housework and childcare after labour market return. It examines to what extent changes in economic resources because of leave take-up may account for adaptations in the division of domestic work of dual-earner couples. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (1992–2012) on about 800 couples with a first or second birth, we applied OLS regression models with lagged dependent variables. The results suggested that dual-earner couples where mothers took longer leaves experienced a greater shift towards a gender-traditional division of domestic labour after childbirth. Fathers’ leave take-up was associated with a more equal division of family work. Lower relative earnings, e.g. as a result of changes in job-related skills after the leave, did not account for the shift in the gender division of family work.