Data from a representative survey of adult Australians are analysed for usual and preferred working time across family types. We discover a time divide regardless of gender and family type: many short hours individuals desire longer hours of employment, while many long hours individuals prefer shorter hours. The latter group is larger such that the average employee desires fewer hours across family types, with the exception of lone mothers. For dual-earner couples with children, men average approximately 20 hours more per week than women, a difference that would only decline to 18 hours per week if preferred hours were realized. However, approximately one-fifth of these couples exhibited egalitarian or nearly equal working hours. Egalitaria...
International audienceUsing data in the United States, UK and Germany, we show that women whose work...
This paper documents the gendered polarisation of work hours between mothers and fathers in Australi...
Using panel data for 2001-2005 from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) S...
Data from a representative survey of adult Australians are analysed for usual and preferred working ...
Taking into account interdependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part-...
Working time in Australia is very diverse, with large segments of the work force working part-time h...
We consider desires for flexibility in weekly hours by analyzing changes in work hours preferences u...
Taking into account interdependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part-...
This report analyses the 1997 Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) Time Use Survey (TUS) in order t...
Taking into account inter-dependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part...
Taking into account inter-dependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part...
While participants in the Australian working time debate have focussed on the length and diversity o...
Taking into account inter-dependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part...
We investigate the relationship between part‐time work and working hours satisfaction, job satisfact...
Women are more sensitive to life events than men according to this paper by Robert Drago, Mark Woode...
International audienceUsing data in the United States, UK and Germany, we show that women whose work...
This paper documents the gendered polarisation of work hours between mothers and fathers in Australi...
Using panel data for 2001-2005 from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) S...
Data from a representative survey of adult Australians are analysed for usual and preferred working ...
Taking into account interdependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part-...
Working time in Australia is very diverse, with large segments of the work force working part-time h...
We consider desires for flexibility in weekly hours by analyzing changes in work hours preferences u...
Taking into account interdependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part-...
This report analyses the 1997 Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) Time Use Survey (TUS) in order t...
Taking into account inter-dependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part...
Taking into account inter-dependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part...
While participants in the Australian working time debate have focussed on the length and diversity o...
Taking into account inter-dependence within the family, we investigate the relationship between part...
We investigate the relationship between part‐time work and working hours satisfaction, job satisfact...
Women are more sensitive to life events than men according to this paper by Robert Drago, Mark Woode...
International audienceUsing data in the United States, UK and Germany, we show that women whose work...
This paper documents the gendered polarisation of work hours between mothers and fathers in Australi...
Using panel data for 2001-2005 from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) S...