A recent policy direction in many OECD countries has been to increase workforce participation for women of childbearing age; a policy direction which seemingly runs counter to a need for improved work-life balance for women themselves. This article explores the impact of this somewhat contradictory 'push-pull' of policy by examining some difficulties of workforce participation, transition and re-entry articulated by female case study participants from an Australian Research Council funded study, which examined the career decision-making of contemporary Australian workers. Against a backdrop of the larger study, this article features detail from interviews with skilled women workers on their return from maternity leave, particularl...
Welfare-to-work programs are now enduring features of Australia's labour market and social policy la...
This presentation is based on a longitudinal qualitative study and reflects on how primary carers ma...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women’s paid work, care and family life or...
A recent policy direction in many OECD countries has been to increase workforce participation for wo...
Paid maternity leave policy attracts considerable attention in Australia and internationally, not le...
This study was commissioned by the Commonwealth, State, Territories and New Zealand Ministers on the...
Australian women make decisions about return to paid work and care for their child within a policy e...
Australian women make decisions about returning to paid work and care for their child within a polic...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women's paid work, care and family li...
Women in contemporary western economies have both more options and more pressures to combine work wi...
This article explores how responsibilities for childcare are managed as part of family decisions mad...
This paper expands on earlier work by Losoncz and Bortolotto (2009), which identified six distinctiv...
This article examines the experiences of women who work in child care centres as care-givers. In rec...
Welfare-to-work programs are now enduring features of Australia's labour market and social policy la...
This presentation is based on a longitudinal qualitative study and reflects on how primary carers ma...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women’s paid work, care and family life or...
A recent policy direction in many OECD countries has been to increase workforce participation for wo...
Paid maternity leave policy attracts considerable attention in Australia and internationally, not le...
This study was commissioned by the Commonwealth, State, Territories and New Zealand Ministers on the...
Australian women make decisions about return to paid work and care for their child within a policy e...
Australian women make decisions about returning to paid work and care for their child within a polic...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women's paid work, care and family li...
Women in contemporary western economies have both more options and more pressures to combine work wi...
This article explores how responsibilities for childcare are managed as part of family decisions mad...
This paper expands on earlier work by Losoncz and Bortolotto (2009), which identified six distinctiv...
This article examines the experiences of women who work in child care centres as care-givers. In rec...
Welfare-to-work programs are now enduring features of Australia's labour market and social policy la...
This presentation is based on a longitudinal qualitative study and reflects on how primary carers ma...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women’s paid work, care and family life or...