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Shifting worlds of father politics? Comparing path-departing change in paternity and parental leave policy in Germany and the UK
[journal article]
Abstract How families balance employment and the care of young children has become a focus of dynamic policy change in many high-income countries since the 1990s. While there has been a broad shift across the OECD away from male-breadwinner model work-family policy regimes, there is much variation in the ext... view more
How families balance employment and the care of young children has become a focus of dynamic policy change in many high-income countries since the 1990s. While there has been a broad shift across the OECD away from male-breadwinner model work-family policy regimes, there is much variation in the extent to which policies targeted at fathers have been part of these changes. Examining this variation, this article compares two cases which both represent 'late path shifters' away from the male-breadwinner family model, yet whose trajectory in terms of 'father politics' are very different: Germany, which has introduced well-remunerated, non-transferable periods of leave for fathers, and the UK, where leave policy has remained overwhelmingly focused on mothers. This article seeks to explain these different trajectories through an analysis of the political role of ideas in the two processes of reform. Drawing on documentary analysis and interviews with policymakers, it argues that a substantial shift in ideas about the role of fathers underpinned the reforms in Germany, while no such shift took place in the UK. This difference is explained with reference to political conditions, which created similar but different windows of opportunity for change, and the impact of existing policy legacies.... view less
Keywords
Great Britain; Federal Republic of Germany; EVS; parental leave; fatherhood; father; labor policy; family policy; idealism; work-family balance; political change
Classification
Family Policy, Youth Policy, Policy on the Elderly
Free Keywords
paternity leave; ideational change; coalition magnets; EVS - European Values Study 1999 - Integrated Dataset (ZA3811 v3.0.0); European Values Study 2008: Integrated Dataset (EVS 2008) (ZA4800 v4.0.0)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 2556-2575
Journal
Journal of Family Studies, 29 (2023) 6
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/13229400.2023.2179529
ISSN
1839-3543
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed