Authors: Janet C. Gornick and Alexandra Heron

Publication: Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice. vol. 8, no. 2. pp. 149-166

Date: August 2006

Abstract: 

This article compares working time policies in eight European countries, Japan, and the US, specifically policies that embody three goals: (1) reducing the full-time working week to less than the traditional standard of 40 hours; (2) guaranteeing workers an adequate number of paid days, annually, away from the workplace; and (3) raising the quality and availability of voluntary part-time work. While working time policies can help to free up parental caregiving time, they also have some potentially problematic consequences – including an associated rise in nonstandard-hour scheduling and the possibility of negative effects on gender equality.

Link: The Regulation of Working Time as Work-Family Reconciliation Policy: Comparing Europe, Japan, and the United States (PDF)