… in health The conditions in which women and men live, work and spend their time affect their health. Gender and … and have the greatest impact on those not in paid work and those with a low income, such as women with a low … isolation, but also the increased and sustained burden of unpaidwork triggered by school closures and movement …
… the role of social constructs, including masculinity and work–family roles. The focus also touches upon other broad … conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age, with these shaped by the global, national and … inequalities in relation to these dimensions. Time use and unpaid care work, as measured by the domain of time, and …
… of gender equality. The amount of time spent in paid work, rest and recreation, or caring for others has knock-on … a person’s life. This includes their health. The burden of unpaid care is increasingly regarded as a determinant of … women are still expected to assume a greater share of unpaid care of children, older people and people with …
… interlinked. Motherhood and the unequal distribution of unpaid childcare between women and men make it harder for women to commit more time to paid work (EIGE, 2019e). The overall share of women in part-time work is greater since they balance paid jobs and unpaid care work to a greater extent than men (see Chapter 2, …
… Gender inequalities in the domain of work remain entrenched (EIGE, 2020a). They are reflected in … are key pillars of gender inequalities in the world of work, with unequal distribution of care, family and other … as never before, the crucial links between paid and unpaidwork, and between the economic and health spheres. …
… It looks at gender equality in the EU in six core domains: work, money, knowledge, time, power and health. It finds that … and that greater equality is achieved in both paid and unpaidwork. Workers in the care sector, who are mostly women and …
… in retail, accommodation, residential care, domestic work and clothing manufacturing suffered heavy job losses. … more care responsibilities than before, women’s share of unpaidwork has increased. Online schooling represents a new form of unpaid care for parents, especially for women who are more …
… for Gender Equality (EIGE). Across the EU, the bulk of unpaid care work is done by women, with 92 % providing unpaid care … men. Employed women also do more than their fair share of unpaid care work. Across the EU, they spend 90 minutes more …
… from adopting stereotypically masculine behaviour at work , showing they ‘have what it takes’ to succeed [1] . … said they had no budget for paternity leave. I had to take unpaid leave.” Dimitry, Diplomatic organisation Men who … found to face discrimination [8] . Fathers who want to work part-time can face discrimination Footnotes [1] Berdahl, …
… allow more flexibility in where and when people work. Flexible working arrangements typically relate to how … by blurred boundaries between leisure time and unpaid care, with phenomena such as contamination (leisure … schedules, often involving a considerable amount of unpaid time spent searching for work and the need to be …
… two closely related processes: increased flexibility of work and the emergence of new forms of work. Increases in … is often the only option for people to combine substantial unpaid care responsibilities (primarily taken on by women) … reduce gender inequalities in the distribution of unpaidwork (and thus contribute to gender equality in the …