This paper examines whether the expansion of working from home led to a more equal division of domestic work during the pandemic. We use unique data of dual-earner heterosexual couples gathered during the first lockdown in the UK when workers were required to work from home by law. Results reveal that mothers were likely to be carrying out a larger share of domestic work both before and during the lockdown. When fathers worked from home, compared to those going into work, a more equitable division was found for cleaning and routine childcare. Furthermore, homeworking fathers were up to 3.5 times more likely to report that they increased the time they spent on childcare during the lockdown compared to before. However, we also found evidence ...
As the Covid-19 pandemic causes an all-time high share of people to work from home, this disruptive ...
Homeworking is often portrayed as a work-life balance measure. Though in theory homeworking can prov...
Using the UK Household Longitudinal Study we examine how flexible working is associated with the div...
This paper examines whether the expansion of homeworking led to a more equal division of domestic wo...
This paper examines whether the expansion of working from home led to a more equal division of domes...
COVID-19 has uprooted many aspects of parents' daily routines, from their jobs to their childcare ar...
A lockdown implies a shift from the public to the private sphere, and from market to non-market prod...
As part of the UK's response to the COVID pandemic many co-habiting parents simultaneously began wor...
Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic has had a dramatic impact on families' lives because o...
This article examines the troubling of gender norms that unfolded on the social networking site, Mum...
This thesis explores changes in the division of paid and domestic work when British couples become p...
Anna Zamberlan, Filippo Gioachin, and Davide Gritti show that both men and women who lost paid hours...
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted work and family life around the world. For parents, this upending me...
This article assesses the gendered impact of COVID-19 measures on changes in time that Swiss dual ea...
France was under a “hard” lockdown from the end of March 2020 to the beginning of May 2020. Outings ...
As the Covid-19 pandemic causes an all-time high share of people to work from home, this disruptive ...
Homeworking is often portrayed as a work-life balance measure. Though in theory homeworking can prov...
Using the UK Household Longitudinal Study we examine how flexible working is associated with the div...
This paper examines whether the expansion of homeworking led to a more equal division of domestic wo...
This paper examines whether the expansion of working from home led to a more equal division of domes...
COVID-19 has uprooted many aspects of parents' daily routines, from their jobs to their childcare ar...
A lockdown implies a shift from the public to the private sphere, and from market to non-market prod...
As part of the UK's response to the COVID pandemic many co-habiting parents simultaneously began wor...
Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic has had a dramatic impact on families' lives because o...
This article examines the troubling of gender norms that unfolded on the social networking site, Mum...
This thesis explores changes in the division of paid and domestic work when British couples become p...
Anna Zamberlan, Filippo Gioachin, and Davide Gritti show that both men and women who lost paid hours...
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted work and family life around the world. For parents, this upending me...
This article assesses the gendered impact of COVID-19 measures on changes in time that Swiss dual ea...
France was under a “hard” lockdown from the end of March 2020 to the beginning of May 2020. Outings ...
As the Covid-19 pandemic causes an all-time high share of people to work from home, this disruptive ...
Homeworking is often portrayed as a work-life balance measure. Though in theory homeworking can prov...
Using the UK Household Longitudinal Study we examine how flexible working is associated with the div...