The United States is the only developed country that fails to guarantee paid time off work to new parents. As a result, many new parents, particularly low-wage workers, are forced to go back to work within days or weeks of a birth or adoption. In recent years, a growing number of states have passed laws to address this gap in American labor policy, and in December 2019, Congress enacted legislation providing paid parental leave for most federal workers. This Article offers the first detailed analysis of these new laws, and it exposes how their structure—probably unintentionally—disadvantages sole-parent families. In America, unlike most other countries, leave is provided on a sex-neutral basis as an individual benefit to each parent of a ne...
This piece is a chapter in a compendium of policy briefs in Our Kids, Our Future: Solutions to Child...
The United States and Australia are unusual in their approach to providing paid time off to new pare...
In the United States, paid leave policies have developed slowly compared to other UN member states a...
Paid Parental Leave (PPL) is not universally available in the United States. Instead, the U.S. provi...
This article will examine parental leave and the non-normative parent. Parental leave in the United ...
U.S. federal and state family leave legislation requires employers to provide job protected parental...
Parental leave policies give parents a temporary leave from employment in order to care for a child....
Life for 21st-century children and families is defined by rapid economic, social, and technological ...
Parental leave is a broad term that encompasses maternity and/or paternity leave to care for an infa...
This Article presents a critique of unpaid parental leaves and the parental leave legislation rece...
Job-protected parental leave is crucial for the health and economic security of babies, pregnant wom...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Community, Work & Fami...
The United States is the only developed nation that fails to provide its citizens with paid parental...
A father wants to take time off to bond with his new baby at home, but his employer only offers paid...
What does it mean to be a successful working parent? And how do working parents cope in the United S...
This piece is a chapter in a compendium of policy briefs in Our Kids, Our Future: Solutions to Child...
The United States and Australia are unusual in their approach to providing paid time off to new pare...
In the United States, paid leave policies have developed slowly compared to other UN member states a...
Paid Parental Leave (PPL) is not universally available in the United States. Instead, the U.S. provi...
This article will examine parental leave and the non-normative parent. Parental leave in the United ...
U.S. federal and state family leave legislation requires employers to provide job protected parental...
Parental leave policies give parents a temporary leave from employment in order to care for a child....
Life for 21st-century children and families is defined by rapid economic, social, and technological ...
Parental leave is a broad term that encompasses maternity and/or paternity leave to care for an infa...
This Article presents a critique of unpaid parental leaves and the parental leave legislation rece...
Job-protected parental leave is crucial for the health and economic security of babies, pregnant wom...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Community, Work & Fami...
The United States is the only developed nation that fails to provide its citizens with paid parental...
A father wants to take time off to bond with his new baby at home, but his employer only offers paid...
What does it mean to be a successful working parent? And how do working parents cope in the United S...
This piece is a chapter in a compendium of policy briefs in Our Kids, Our Future: Solutions to Child...
The United States and Australia are unusual in their approach to providing paid time off to new pare...
In the United States, paid leave policies have developed slowly compared to other UN member states a...