Gender inequality of childcare provision is regarded as one of the main barriers to women’s labour-market careers. However, there is a scarcity of quantitative studies that examine fathers’ and mothers’ combined childcare. This research focuses on father’s and mother’s timing and type of childcare for co-resident couples with a young child. Using the two most recent UK Time-Use Surveys, the study derives typologies of couples’ childcare patterns with a particular focus on gender differences. The five patterns on weekdays and three patterns on weekend days highlight gender inequalities not just in the duration of parents’ time with their children but also in its timing. Mothers are more often than fathers involved during standard working hou...
This study uses data from the British Household Panel Survey and Understanding Society to analyse th...
This study examined the association between parental work schedules and non-parental childcare arra...
This thesis explores changes in the division of paid and domestic work when British couples become p...
What impact does out-sourcing childcare have on the time parents spend on paid work, domestic work a...
This study uses time diary data from the 2003 American Time Use Survey and the United Kingdom Time U...
Funded by the Nuffield Foundation, this 3-year project seeks to identify routes and barriers to grea...
This data collection includes syntax needed to: (1) merge data and commands used for weighting data;...
In this study we use time-diary data from Denmark, Spain, and the United Kingdom to analyze how fath...
Fathers still put less time than mothers into the domestic tasks involved in looking after their chi...
Objective: We examined associations between types of nonstandard work schedules among fathers, coupl...
One “puzzle ” in the time diary literature on father involvement is that fathers ’ childcare time is...
Various aspects of parental work schedules affect the opportunities and constraints that parents enc...
The time that married fathers spend caring for their children has risen markedly over the past 20 ye...
First Online: 07 April 2016This study used data from the ‘Well Being Module’ of the 2010 American Ti...
International Women’s Day was last month and the take away message this year was much the same as in...
This study uses data from the British Household Panel Survey and Understanding Society to analyse th...
This study examined the association between parental work schedules and non-parental childcare arra...
This thesis explores changes in the division of paid and domestic work when British couples become p...
What impact does out-sourcing childcare have on the time parents spend on paid work, domestic work a...
This study uses time diary data from the 2003 American Time Use Survey and the United Kingdom Time U...
Funded by the Nuffield Foundation, this 3-year project seeks to identify routes and barriers to grea...
This data collection includes syntax needed to: (1) merge data and commands used for weighting data;...
In this study we use time-diary data from Denmark, Spain, and the United Kingdom to analyze how fath...
Fathers still put less time than mothers into the domestic tasks involved in looking after their chi...
Objective: We examined associations between types of nonstandard work schedules among fathers, coupl...
One “puzzle ” in the time diary literature on father involvement is that fathers ’ childcare time is...
Various aspects of parental work schedules affect the opportunities and constraints that parents enc...
The time that married fathers spend caring for their children has risen markedly over the past 20 ye...
First Online: 07 April 2016This study used data from the ‘Well Being Module’ of the 2010 American Ti...
International Women’s Day was last month and the take away message this year was much the same as in...
This study uses data from the British Household Panel Survey and Understanding Society to analyse th...
This study examined the association between parental work schedules and non-parental childcare arra...
This thesis explores changes in the division of paid and domestic work when British couples become p...