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Explore factors shaping paternal involvement in childcare in the UK over a child’s life course, utilizing a theoretical framework and data analysis to identify patterns and predictors.
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What influences paternal involvement in childcare over the child’s life course in the UK? Helen Norman University of Manchester, UK 18th September 2017 Instituto Superior de Ciências Sociais e Políticas: seminar University of Lisbon, Portugal
Which fathers are involved in looking after their children? Identifying the conditions associated with paternal involvement • Aim: To establish which employment and socio-demographic characteristics shape paternal involvement as children age from nine months to eleven years old. • Award: ESRC Secondary Data Analysis Initiative (Phase 3) • Dates: 1 February 2016 - 31 October 2017 • Award holders: Dr Helen Norman (PI), Professor Colette Fagan (Co-I), Professor Mark Elliot (Co-I). RA: Dr Laura Watt. University of Manchester, UK • Project partner: Working Families: https://www.workingfamilies.org.uk/ • URL: http://projects.socialsciences.manchester.ac.uk/involved-fathers/
Project research questions • How can we develop quantitative measure(s) of paternal involvement in childcare? • What influences paternal involvement in childcare at different time points of a child’s life? (i.e. 9 months, 3, 5, 7 and 11 years old) • Does a father’s childcare and employment behaviour in the first year of a child’s life affect how involved he is when the child is older? • Do the trajectories of paternal involvement over the child’s lifecourse vary between fathers and if so, what are the predictors? • Does paternal involvement impact on the stability of the relationship between the mother and the father?
Presentation outline • The gender division of labour in the UK • Work-family policy in the UK • Theoretical framework • Research Questions • Data and methods • Results: which fathers are the most involved? • Conclusions and policy implications
The gender division of labour in the UK • Men do more childcare and housework, but still much less than women. • Normative ideas about what it is to be a ‘good’ father have shifted to include being involved in childcare, but being the (main) economic provider remains a central feature. • 95% of MCS (S1) fathers agreed they should be involved in a child’s upbringing. • Women usually switch to part-time employment after having children. • 67% of mothers with dependent children (under 18) employed (2010); 37% = PT • Rare for mothers to work full-time if they have a pre-school child, more likely if she is a manager/senior professional • This ‘one-and-a-half earner’ family model is perpetuated by public policy and normative beliefs that children suffer if their mothers are employed full-time.
Theoretical framework What is paternal involvement? • Defined as a father who participates in the nurturing tasks involved in the ‘taking care of’ children. Amartya Sen’s (1992) capabilities framework: • Economic, social, demographic and cultural factors exert logistical pressures on how childcare and domestic work is arranged. • Thus, fathers may strive to be involved parents but organisational policies, social norms, and household circumstances hinder or enable their capabilities to be involved.
Work-family policy in the UK • Long maternity leave (52 weeks) • 6 weeks paid @90% of salary; 33 weeks paid at low flat rate (£140 / €155 p/week); remaining 13 weeks unpaid • Short period of paternity leave (2 weeks) • Paid at a low flat rate (£140 / 155€ p/week) • Equivalent to 25% of men’s FT median (gross) weekly earnings • Most dads (>90%) take time off after the birth of their baby but only half use paternity leave (Chanfreau et. al 2011). • Parental leave- recently reformed to facilitate take up amongst fathers (as ‘Shared Parental Leave’) • Pre-school childcare -(15 hours p/week over 38 weeks of the year) • ‘Right to request’part-time or flexible hours
Research Questions • To explore which socio-demographics, employment and attitudinal related variables are associated with paternal involvement when children are aged 9 months, 3, 5 and 7 and 11 years old? • Do the variables which influence fathers change as a child gets older? • Does a father’s childcare and employment behaviour in the first year of a child’s life affect how involved he is when the child is older?
Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) • A nationally representative survey following a cohort of children born around 2000 in the UK • We use the first five sweeps of MCS data: • Sweep 1 (2000/01): aged 9 months • Sweep 2 (2004/5): aged 3 years • Sweep 3 (2006): aged 5 years • Sweep 4 (2008): aged 7 years • Sweep 5 (2012): aged 11 years • The sample was filtered to include the same heterosexual couples, intact over all five sweeps of data (n=5,899)
Data and Methods Method to derive our dependent variables: • Factor analysis (a data reduction technique) • Identifies patterns of relationships and correlations between variables • Then reduces a large number of variables into a smaller number of latent factors Dependent variables (or latent factors): • Paternal involvement (PI) at 9 months old • PI at 3 years old • PI at 5 years old • PI at 7 years old Method to explore what influences PI: • Four multiple regression models
Results: What influences paternal involvement when the child is aged 9 months, 3, 5 and 7 years old?
What makes fathers involved? *p <0.05; **p <0.01; ***p <0.001
Summary: What makes fathers more involved? i) Fathers are more likely to be involved in the first year if: • They work standard, full-time hours (30-45 hrs p/week) • The mother works full-time (31+ hrs p/week) ii) Fathers are more likely to be involved when the child is aged 9 months, 3, 5 and 7 years old if: • They share childcare equallyin the first year • They take leave immediately after the birth • They are highly educated • They have a boy iii) Fathers are less likely to be involved when the child is aged 9 months, 3, 5 and 7 years old if: • They are Pakistani, Bangladeshi or Indian
Conclusions and policy implications A more supportive infrastructure could be achieved by: • Helping fathers to balance their work and family roles in the first year of parenthood • Parental leave that is well paid and has a period reserved specifically for the father • Limits to long hours working • Promotion of flexible working to men • Supporting mothers back to work after having children • Good quality, flexible and affordable childcare • Quality part-time employment • Closing the gender pay gap
References • Project URL: http://projects.socialsciences.manchester.ac.uk/involved-fathers/ • Fagan, C., Norman, H. (2016): ‘What makes fathers involved? An exploration of the longitudinal influence of fathers’ and mothers’ employment on father’s involvement in looking after their pre-school children in the UK’ in Crespi, I., Ruspini, E. (ed): Balancing work and family in a changing society: the father’s perspective, Palgrave MacMillan: Basingstoke • Norman, H. (2017): Paternal involvement in childcare: how can it be classified and what are the key influences, Families, Relationships and Societies. 6, 1, p. 89-105 • Norman, H. and Fagan, C. (2017) What makes fathers involved in their children’s upbringing? Working Families Work Flex Blog, 20 January 2017: https://www.workingfamilies.org.uk/workflex-blog/father-involvement/ • Norman, H., Watt, L., Fagan, C. (2017) What should mums and dads do? Changes in attitudes towards parenting, Working Families Work Flex Blog, 27 March 2017: https://www.workingfamilies.org.uk/workflex-blog/what-should-mums-and-dads-do-changes-in-attitudes-towards-parenting/ • Norman, H., Elliot, M. and Fagan, C. (2014) ‘Which fathers are the most involved in taking care of their toddlers in the UK? An investigation of the predictors of paternal involvement’, Community, Work & Family, 17:2, 163-180 • Fagan, C. and Norman, H. (2013) ‘Men and gender equality: tackling gender equality in family roles and in social care jobs’ in F. Bettio, J. Plantenga and M. Smith (Eds) Gender and the European Labour Market, Routledge: Oxon, UK.