9 research outputs found
Rescaling education policy:Central-local relations and the politics of scale in England and Sweden
Access for All?:Sozialinvestitionen in der frühkindlichen Bildung und Betreuung im europäischen Vergleich
Child and parental wellbeing during the Covid pandemic: summary of Highland research and workshops
This paper focuses on the research and discussions from the Highland workshops which were part of the wider research programme for UKRI Covid-19 rapid response project ‘Childcare and Wellbeing in Times of Covid-19’. To see the full report and find out more about the research www.childcare-covid.or
Child and Parental Wellbeing during the Covid-Pandemic
This briefing forms part of a series of resources published from the UKRI rapid response project ‘Childcare and Wellbeing in Times of Covid-19’. The full research report, other thematic briefing and working papers, blogs and presentations are available on the Childcare and Wellbeing website www.childcare-covid.or
A Study on the Transition of Work-Family Reconciliation Policy and Gender Regime -Focusing on Recent Introduction of Parents Benefit-
Child Care and Feminism in West Germany and Sweden in the 1960s and 1970s
Feminist welfare-state research has repeatedly pointed to the link between women's social rights and the extent to which they are freed from family obligations. Thus the availability of sufficient extra-familial child care in order to combine work and family life should be a central claim of women activists. Swedish child-care politics of the 1960s and 1970s reflects this logic well: Swedish feminists lobbied intensely for the expansion of public child care. In West Germany, however, second-wave feminists made no major demand for child-care services: German feminist politics does not fit with the assumptions about women's interests underlying most feminist research on welfare states. Rather than assuming a fixed set of women's interests, this paper argues for a dynamic and contextualizing approach to women's collective agency in modern welfare states. It is argued that national variations in feminist politics concerning women's social rights are the result of differences in women's collective identity formation and their reactions to historically specific political and discursive opportunity structures