In 1997 the UK government launched the Sure Start early year’s intervention scheme, offering early years education, health services, adult employment advice and free or highly subsidised child care located in one convenient service available to the most deprived areas. The aim was to improve the life chances of the most disadvantaged children, but also to increase employment for mothers of young children. Through logistic regression this paper examines the employment outcomes for mothers in Sure Start areas compared to a nationally representative sample of mothers of children of the same age. The findings show a small increase in the odds of employment in comparison to the national sample however the magnitude is small and tensions central ...
peer reviewedIn 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal chil...
Female labour force participation (FLFP) in the UK has stagnated in recent decades in spite of polic...
Women’s employment has changed significantly over the 1980s and 1990s: mothers of young children are...
In 1998 a U.K. government review concluded that disadvantage among young children was increasing and...
The British government’s wish to eliminate the cycle of disadvantage for children from poor families...
Understanding the conditions that facilitate mothers’ employment and fathers’ involvement in childca...
It is typically found that the labour force participation of women is negatively affected by the pre...
When Labour came to power in 1997 it made commitments to reduce poverty and improve children’s healt...
In 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal child care for 0-...
Influenced by research indicating long-term benefits of early childhood programmes for disadvantaged...
This paper addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalised childcare influen...
In this paper, we investigate whether the expansion of childcare leads to an increase in the female ...
This month’s Social Policy Trends revisits an issue we first examined in November 2017, namely, poss...
The Equality Commission for Northern Ireland commissioned the Employment Research Institute at Edinb...
This article addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalized childcare influ...
peer reviewedIn 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal chil...
Female labour force participation (FLFP) in the UK has stagnated in recent decades in spite of polic...
Women’s employment has changed significantly over the 1980s and 1990s: mothers of young children are...
In 1998 a U.K. government review concluded that disadvantage among young children was increasing and...
The British government’s wish to eliminate the cycle of disadvantage for children from poor families...
Understanding the conditions that facilitate mothers’ employment and fathers’ involvement in childca...
It is typically found that the labour force participation of women is negatively affected by the pre...
When Labour came to power in 1997 it made commitments to reduce poverty and improve children’s healt...
In 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal child care for 0-...
Influenced by research indicating long-term benefits of early childhood programmes for disadvantaged...
This paper addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalised childcare influen...
In this paper, we investigate whether the expansion of childcare leads to an increase in the female ...
This month’s Social Policy Trends revisits an issue we first examined in November 2017, namely, poss...
The Equality Commission for Northern Ireland commissioned the Employment Research Institute at Edinb...
This article addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalized childcare influ...
peer reviewedIn 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal chil...
Female labour force participation (FLFP) in the UK has stagnated in recent decades in spite of polic...
Women’s employment has changed significantly over the 1980s and 1990s: mothers of young children are...