Fathers, work and families in the 21st century

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Fathers, work and families in twenty- first century Britain: beyond the breadwinner model? The findings in this presentation are preliminary – please do not reference without authors’ permission Margaret O’Brien & Svetlana Speight Matt Aldrich, Sara Connolly, Eloise Poole 23 April 2013, UCL

description

Slides showing the results of research into the role of fathers at home and at work in the 21st century. We've examined biological and social fatherhood and all types of fathers, including those who live on their own and lone fathers. We find out if the classic British earner household of a father working full-time and a mother working part-time is still relevant and examine changes to fathers' working hours. Finally, we look at how involved parents are in the lives of their children, and whether things are different for fathers and mothers. This research was carried out by NatCen Social Research and the University of East Anglia. It was funded by the ESRC. Although principally focused on fathers in the UK, we also examine how the realities of fatherhood vary across Europe.

Transcript of Fathers, work and families in the 21st century

Page 1: Fathers, work and families in the 21st century

Fathers, work and families in twenty-first century Britain: beyond

the breadwinner model?

The findings in this presentation are preliminary – please do not

reference without authors’ permission

Margaret O’Brien & Svetlana Speight Matt Aldrich, Sara Connolly, Eloise Poole

23 April 2013, UCL

Page 2: Fathers, work and families in the 21st century

Outline

• Policy & research context

• Aims of project and data sources

• Profiling of UK fathers’ working patterns Time trends in employment status and hours 2001-2011; continuity and change across different family types

• Profiling UK Fathers: fatherhood status and definitions. Dealing with Complexity: bio, social, non-resident

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Policy & Research Context

“ In a rapidly changing world, we will continue witnessing the growing momentum and recognition of the importance of men for gender equality, reconciling work-family life and impacting the future of their children”

Men in Families and Family Policy in a Changing World Report 2011 New York: United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/ family/docs/men-in-families.pdf

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Research: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s

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Fathers: partners, carers, involved, nurturers

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Anxieties about absent fathers

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Inter-disciplinary conceptual framework for understanding change and continuity in

men’s family and work roles • Awareness that the family unit is undergoing a transition from

a traditional unitary model based on a male dominant economic actor towards a different logic with less specialization of roles by gender (Becker, 1981; Browning et al, 2011).

• New norms redefining family life are emerging – “a gender-equality equilibrium” – but are unstable (Esping-Anderson, 2009).

• A multidimensional approach to men’s parenting activities or “father involvement” with direct and indirect influences of paternal capital on child and family wellbeing (Pleck, 2010)

• Awareness that public policy measures, such as parental leave and flexible working schedules, have a profound effect on how much time children get to spend with their parents (Gornick & Meyers, 2009; Lewis, 2009).

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Aims of the study

1. To provide a comprehensive profiling of fathers in 21st century Britain in terms of their paid work and family life.

2. To explore factors associated with differences in fathers’ paid work and family life.

3. To analyse time trends in fathers’ working patterns to explore effects of policy changes.

4. To explore the role of institutional factors, by comparing the UK with other European countries.

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Data

1. Understanding society, wave 1 (2009-10) and wave 2 (2010-11).

2. EU Labour Force Survey (late 1990s-current)

3. European Social Survey, round 2 (2004-05) and round 5 (2010-11)

4. British Household Panel Survey, all 18 waves (1991-2009)

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Fathers’ working patterns

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EU- LFS 2001-2011

• Adult couple households with dependent children (2011 20,569 couple households of which 6,092 have at least one child under the age of 15 living in the household)

• Age restriction on the household reference person – 16-64 years

• Employment status FT = 30 hours or more per week PT = <30 hours per week

• Definitions of working hours "usual" weekly hours

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Working patterns of couple households with

dependent children 2001-2011 (HRP 16-64)

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40

Other

Neither

working

Male sole PT

earner

Female sole PT

earner

Dual PT

Female sole FT

earner

Male sole FT

earner

FFT and MPT

MFT and FPT

MFT and FFT

Oth

er0

.5 w

ork

er1

FTE

wo

rker

1.5

FTE

wo

rker

s

2 F

TE

wo

rker

s

% of households

2011 2001

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43

44

45

46

47

48

2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011

Ave

rage

usu

al h

ou

rs in

mai

n jo

b

Working hours of men in households with children (age 16-64)

MFT and FFT MFT and FPT Male sole FT earner All FT All

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15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011

Ave

rage

usu

al h

ou

rs in

mai

n jo

b

Working hours of men in households with children PT (age 16-64)

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15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011

Ave

rage

usu

al h

ou

rs in

mai

n jo

b

Working hours of men in households with children by family type PT (age 16-64)

FFT and MPT Dual PT Male sole PT earner All PT

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38

39

40

41

42

2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011

Ave

rage

usu

al h

ou

rs in

mai

n jo

b

Working hours of women in households with children FT (age 16-64)

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38

39

40

41

42

2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011

Ave

rage

usu

al h

ou

rs in

mai

n jo

b

Working hours of women in households with children FT by family type (age 16-64)

MFT and FFT FFT and MPT Female sole FT earner All FT

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0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011

% w

ork

ing

60

or

mo

re h

ou

rs p

er

we

ek

Incidence of long working hours 60+ of parents (age 16-64)

Father dual earner hh Father 1.5 earner hh Male sole earner hh All full-time fathers

Mother dual earner hh Mother 1.5 earner hh Female sole earner hh All full-time mothers

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Fatherhood: concepts

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Fatherhood

• Fathers v ‘non-fathers’

– Typology

• Biological v social father

• Resident v non-resident father

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Fatherhood status

1. Fathers co-resident with dependent children: in couples

2. Fathers co-resident with dependent children: single parents

3. Fathers not living with any dependent children

4. Non-fathers

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Fatherhood status, 2009/10

0 10 20 30 40

Non-father

Father, no dependent children

Father, dependent children, lone

Father, dependent children,

couple

Base: men aged 16+ (n=20,741, Understanding Society survey)

25

1

38

36

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Age profile

41

1

0

2

27

3

11

22

12

6

42

43

12

32

40

31

8

58

7

2

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Non-father

Father, no dependent

children

Father, dependent

children, lone

Father, dependent

children, couple

16-24 25-34 35-44 45-59 60+

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Non-fathers, by age

0 20 40 60 80 100

60+

45 to 59

35 to 44

25 to 34

16 to 24

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Economic status

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Economically inactive

Unemployed

Working part-time

Working full-time

Economically inactive

Unemployed

Working part-time

Working full-time

Economically inactive

Unemployed

Working part-time

Working full-time

Economically inactive

Unemployed

Working part-time

Working full-time

No

n-f

ath

er

Fath

er, n

o

dep

end

ent

child

ren

Fath

er,

dep

end

ent

child

ren

, lo

ne

Fath

er,

dep

end

ent

child

ren

,

cou

ple

% within each category of fatherhood

(men aged 16-64)

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Biological v social father

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Fathers co-resident with dependent children

0 20 40 60 80 100

Step

Foster

Adopted

Biological 94

1

0.4

11

Base: fathers co-resident with dependent children (n=5,556)

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Bio v non-bio

96

87

2

7

2

6

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Lone fathers

Couple fathers

Bio only Bio and non-bio Non-bio only

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Resident v non-resident father

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Whether has a non-resident child <16

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14

Non-father

Father, no dependent children

Father, dependent children, lone

Father, dependent children,

couple

All men 16+

Base: all men aged 16+ (n=20,663)

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Non-resident fathers

More likely to be:

• <45 years old (compared with 45+)

• Living without a partner (OR: 28!)

• Less well educated

• Not in paid work

• NS-SEC group - routine occupations

• In rented accommodation

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Whether non-resident fathers are co-resident with any dependent children

Base: fathers who have non-resident children under 16 (n=1,053)

27%

2%

24%

46%

Has resident

children and is

in a couple

Has resident

children - lone

father

No resident

children and is

single

No resident

children and is

in a couple

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Contact with non-resident children

10 11

5

11

2225

14

2

21

4

1719

17

8

3

10

No

contact

Few times

a year

A few

times a

year

Several

times a

month

Once a

week

Several

times a

week

Almost

every day

50/50

Non-resident child/ren only Resident and non-resident children

Base: fathers who have non-resident children under 16 (n=1,050)

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Thank you

Prof. Margaret O’Brien (UEA) – [email protected]

Dr Svetlana Speight (NatCen Social Research) – [email protected]

Dr Sara Connolly (UEA) – [email protected]

Dr Matt Aldrich (UEA) – [email protected]

Eloise Poole (NatCen) – [email protected]