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El. knyga: Navigating the Return-to-Work Experience for New Parents: Maintaining Work-Family Well-Being

Edited by (School of Business, University of Leicester, UK), Edited by
  • Formatas: 180 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Feb-2020
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000038842
  • Formatas: 180 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Feb-2020
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000038842

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Parenthood can be one of the most fulfilling, life-altering, and life-challenging events. This book is set within the background of the reality of many parents’ return-to-work, the task of re-engaging with work and maintaining a career, and the difficulties that parenthood poses for balancing the demands of a new family with the demands of work. It helps us understand this reality, give voice to new parents, and offer relief in the knowledge that we know a lot about these challenges and, most importantly, how we can start to address them.

The book brings together a number of internationally recognized experts from research, practice, and policy to explore the issues and offer evidence-based solutions around return-to-work after having children. It takes a balanced approach to theory and practice to cover topics such as equality, stereotypes, work-family conflict, training and development, and workplace culture, among others, whilst integrating research and policy, and illustrating learnings with case studies from parents and examples from countries that lead the way.

It will appeal to parents, researchers, and employers in any economy across the world. Ultimately, it will help develop ways for new parents to re-engage with work successfully while maintaining their work-life well-being.

Recenzijos

"What a fascinating book! As both a researcher and campaigner in this area, I welcome the way that the authors have pulled together a terrific mix of contributors from research, practice and policy, to tackle the issues faced by both mothers and fathers in returning to work after childbirth. We have so much to learn from the countries represented here." - Sue Vinnicombe, CBE, Professor of Women and Leadership, Cranfield University, UK

"Men and women participate more equally in the labor market than ever before in many parts of the world. This is probably one of the biggest societal changes to come about in the 20th century. Surprisingly, however, the realities and practicalities of such emancipated labor participation are not well studied, nor are they well understood. One of those realities and practicalities concerns having and raising children. Specifically, parents returning to work are an overlooked group. Fortunately, this book charts the territory and gives important pointers as to where to look, what to understand better, and what we can do. This edited collection of 12 chapters by a range of important scholars provides a wide overview of the issues involved. There is attention for stereotype threats, strategies that parents use, the special case of fathers, the career issues involved, and practices that organizations can offer, just to name a few of the topics addressed. The editors, Maria Karanika-Murray and Cary Cooper, expertly organized the materials and provided an inspiring introduction of the issue. They also added a final chapter that is rich in lessons learned and personal reflections. The bottom line appears to be that the issue requires a lot of maturity from parents, organizations, and governments alike: we all can and need to do our part. On a personal level, when reading this book, it is intriguing to see academics trying to get to grips with the challenge of parenting themselves within the current timeframe and context. I wish this book had been around when I first became a parent." - Marc van Veldhoven, Professor of Work, Health & Well-being, Tilburg University, The Netherlands

List of contributors
ix
Foreword xiv
Ann Francke
Foreword xvi
Laura Addati
1 Introduction---Understanding the return-to-work experience for parents: what is and what could be
1(9)
Maria Karanika-Murray
Cary Cooper
2 New parents navigating the workplace: pregnancy, stereotype threat, and work-family conflict
10(12)
Lindsey M. Lavaysse
Erica L. Bettac
Tahira M. Probst
3 Building the support network of new parents at work and outside
22(12)
Helen Pluut
Sara De Hauw
4 Practical strategies for work-family resources management in the return-to-work experiences of new parents
34(16)
Angela Martin
Sarah Dawkins
Vanessa A. Miles
Sarah J. Cotton
Justine Alter
5 Return-to-work for fathers: a group with specific needs?
50(12)
Marc Grau-Grau
6 Fathers and leave for parenting: how can we increase uptake?
62(10)
Adrienne Burgess
Jeremy Davies
7 Work-family integration and gender equality: how Nordic countries lead the way
72(9)
Gayle Kaufman
8 Career progression: left out of the game?
81(8)
Nina M. Junker
Alina S. Hernandez Bark
Jamie L. Gloor
9 Career development after parenthood: choices, challenges and opportunities
89(12)
Julia Yates
10 Training and development for employees returning to work after parental leave
101(12)
Joanna B. Yarker
Hans-Joachim Wolfram
Nina M. Junker
11 Childcare options in France: beyond the hypothetic free choices
113(12)
Danielle Boyer
Claude Martin
12 What can employers do? Creating an inclusive workplace that fosters work-family well-being
125(10)
Hans Van Dijk
Loes Meeussen
13 Going beyond policies to ease parents back into work and rebalance roles: the importance of idiosyncratic deals
135(11)
Ines Martinez-Corts
J. Pablo Moreno-Beltran
14 What we have learned and what we can do to support parents' return-to-work
146(5)
Cary Cooper
Maria Karanika-Murray
Index 151
Maria Karanika-Murray is an Associate Professor in Occupational Health Psychology at the Department of Psychology, Nottingham Trent University. In her work she brings together different methodologies, disciplines, and stakeholders with the aim to understand the context and develop ways to support work-related health and well-being.at the Department of Psychology, Nottingham Trent University. Her work brings together different methodologies, disciplines, and stakeholders, with the aim to understand the context and develop ways to support work-related health and well-being.

Sir Cary Cooper, CBE, is the 50th Anniversary Professor of Organizational Psychology and Health at ALLIANCE Manchester Business School of the University of Manchester, President of the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (HR professional body), Immediate Past President of the British Academy of Management, and President of the Institute of Welfare.