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Child Care, Parental Leave, and the Under 3s: Policy Innovation in Europe

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Child Care, Parental Leave, and the Under 3s: Policy Innovation in Europe

Contributors:

By (Author) Alfred Kahn
By (author) Sheila Kamerman

ISBN:

9780865690370

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

23rd September 1991

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Labour / income economics
Child welfare and youth services

Dewey:

362.7094

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

248

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 235mm

Weight:

567g

Description

As more and more mothers of young children have entered the workforce in America, the question of child care has become a major issue among employers, scholars, policy-makers and, of course, the general public. The accepted view among those who see a high rate of female labour force participation as inevitable has long been to achieve a consistent maternal/parenting leave of approximately six months, followed by access to good quality child care facilities for use at parental option. Some European countries are, however, now going beyond this point by financially enabling parents to stay at home for one, two or even three years after childbirth. Sheila Kamerman and Alfred Kahn explore with European scholars child care and parenting policies in six countries, and examine the motives and perspectives involved, the specific problems and their costs, the extent to which countries can report the impacts of their methods, and the potential implications of these experiences for the United States. Through these national examples, the editors introduce an important policy debate concerning parenting and children under three. Among the questions raised are whether the government should make it financially easier for parents to remain at home, what the effects of leave policy would be on need for and use of child care facilities, what the relationships between such assistance and the broader income support policies might be and - ultimately - what the consequences of such policies might be for parents and children. The editors begin their work with an introductory chapter that defines the issues for the United States and the reasons for looking towards Europe, and follow with six chapters examining the policies of countries in the lead in this field: Austria, Germany, France, Hungary, Finland and Sweden. The book concludes with a final chapter that suggests possible directions for US policy. This work should be an important resource for planners and for courses in sociology, family studies, early childhood education and social policy, as well as for public, corporate and academic libraries.

Reviews

This book serves as an invaluable reference guide for cross-national sociologists who wish to examine women's status and/or work and family issues in any of the selected countries.-American Journal of Sociology
"This book serves as an invaluable reference guide for cross-national sociologists who wish to examine women's status and/or work and family issues in any of the selected countries."-American Journal of Sociology

Author Bio

SHEILA B. KAMERMAN is a Professor of Social Work at Columbia University and ALFRED J. KAHN is Professor Emeritus of Social Work at Columbia University. Together they have written or edited 15 previous books, and are recognized as leading scholars of comparative child and family policy in the industrialized world.

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