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3 - The Gender Agenda

Women, Work and Maternity Leave

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Marian Baird
Affiliation:
University of Sydney, Sydney
Mark Hearn
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Grant Michelson
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
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Summary

At the beginning of the 21st century, women constitute close to half the paid workforce and represent over 40 per cent of trade union membership in Australia. Like men, they are ‘breadwinners’, contributing to household incomes, organisational profits and the national economy; but they continue, disproportionately, to be also the ‘breadmakers’, combining the domestic responsibilities of mothering and caring with paid work and careers. There is a clear gendered distribution of time in the household, with repercussions in the workplace (HREOC 2005). For women in particular, the changes in workforce participation have increased the stresses on the allocation of time between work, family, leisure and other activities.

In Australia, these changing social patterns have not been recognised with commensurate changes in policy or adequate re-evaluation of women's contribution to the paid workforce. There are clear policy lags and inequities in the distribution of wages and entitlements (Burgess & Baird 2003), and one area in particular shows that women do not receive adequate recognition for their multiple work and family roles. This is the availability of paid maternity leave. Although there has been considerable discussion and debate about the choices and constraints on women's ability to take time out of their working lives to bear and raise children, Australia remains one of only two industrialised nations (the other is the USA) without statutory paid maternity leave for working women.

Type
Chapter
Information
Rethinking Work
Time, Space and Discourse
, pp. 39 - 59
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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