Australian women make decisions about return to paid work and care for their child within a policy environment that presents mixed messages about maternal employment and child care standards. Against this background an investigation of first-time mothers’ decision-making about workforce participation and child care was undertaken. Four women were studied from pregnancy through the first postnatal year using interview and diary methods. Inductive analyses identified three themes, all focused on dimensions of family security: financial security relating to family income, emotional security relating to child care quality, and pragmatic security relating to child care access. The current policy changes that aim to increase child care quality st...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women’s paid work, care and family life or...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women's paid work, care and family li...
A recent policy direction in many OECD countries has been to increase workforce participation for wo...
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...
Australia has witnessed a continual increase in maternal employment over the past two decades, which...
Continual increase in maternal employment in Australia over the past three decades has focused atten...
Australia has witnessed a continual increase in maternal employment over the past two decades, which...
A continual increase in maternal employment in Australia over the past three decades has focused att...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Women in contemporary western economies have both more options and more pressures to combine work wi...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Until recently there have been no statutory maternity leave provisions in Australian workplaces and ...
Australia, like other developed economies, has witnessed continual increase in maternal employment o...
This article explores how responsibilities for childcare are managed as part of family decisions mad...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women’s paid work, care and family life or...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women's paid work, care and family li...
A recent policy direction in many OECD countries has been to increase workforce participation for wo...
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...
Australia has witnessed a continual increase in maternal employment over the past two decades, which...
Continual increase in maternal employment in Australia over the past three decades has focused atten...
Australia has witnessed a continual increase in maternal employment over the past two decades, which...
A continual increase in maternal employment in Australia over the past three decades has focused att...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Women in contemporary western economies have both more options and more pressures to combine work wi...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Until recently there have been no statutory maternity leave provisions in Australian workplaces and ...
Australia, like other developed economies, has witnessed continual increase in maternal employment o...
This article explores how responsibilities for childcare are managed as part of family decisions mad...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women’s paid work, care and family life or...
There is now a burgeoning literature on the ways in which women's paid work, care and family li...
A recent policy direction in many OECD countries has been to increase workforce participation for wo...