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Gender gap in parental leave intentions: Evidence from 37 countries

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posted on 2025-08-01, 16:17 authored by MIT Olsson, S van Grootel, K Block, C Schuster, L Meeussen, C Van Laar, T Schmader, A Croft, MS Sun, M Ainsaar, L Aarntzen, M Adamus, J Anderson, C Atkinson, M Avicenna, P Bąbel, M Barth, TM Benson‐Greenwald, E Maloku, J Berent, HB Bergsieker, M Biernat, AG Bîrneanu, B Bodinaku, J Bosak, J Bosson, M Branković, J Burkauskas, V Čavojová, S Cheryan, E Choi, I Choi, CC Contreras‐Ibáñez, A Coogan, I Danyliuk, I Dar‐Nimrod, N Dasgupta, S de Lemus, T Devos, M Diab, AB Diekman, M Efremova, L Eisner, A Eller, R Erentaite, D Fedáková, R Franc, L Gartzia, A Gavreliuc, D Gavreliuc, J Gecaite‐Stonciene, AL Germano, I Giovannelli, RG Diaz, L Gitikhmayeva, AM Gizaw, B Gjoneska, OM González, R González, ID Grijalva, D Güngör, MG Sendén, W Hall, C Harb, B Hassan, T Hässler, DR Hawi, L Henningsen, A Hoppe, K Ishii, I Jakšić, A Jasini, J Jurkevičienė, K Kelmendi, TA Kirby, Y Kitakaji, N Kosakowska‐Berezecka, I Kozytska, C Kulich, E Kundtová‐Klocová, F Kunuroglu, CL Aidy, A Lee, A Lindqvist, W López‐López, L Luzvinda, F Maricchiolo, D Martinot, RA McNamara, A Meister, TL Melka, N Mickuviene, MI Miranda‐Orrego, T Mkamwa, J Morandini, T Morton, D Mrisho, J Nikitin, S Otten, MG Pacilli, E Page‐Gould, A Perandrés, J Pizarro, N Pop‐Jordanova, J Pyrkosz‐Pacyna, S Quta, T Ramis, N Rani, S Redersdorff, I Régner, EA Renström, A Rivera‐Rodriguez, STE Rocha, T Ryabichenko, R Saab, K Sakata, A Samekin, T Sánchez‐Pachecho, C Scheifele, MK Schulmeyer, S Sczesny, D Sirlopú, V Smith‐Castro, K Soo, F Spaccatini, JR Steele, MC Steffens, I Sucic, J Vandello, LM Velásquez‐Díaz, M Vink, E Vives, TZ Warkineh, I Žeželj, X Zhang, X Zhao, SE Martiny
Despite global commitments and efforts, a gender-based division of paid and unpaid work persists. To identify how psychological factors, national policies, and the broader sociocultural context contribute to this inequality, we assessed parental-leave intentions in young adults (18–30years old) planning to have children (N = 13,942; 8,880 identified as women; 5,062 identified as men) across 37 countries that varied in parental-leave policies and societal gender equality. In all countries, women intended to take longer leave than men. National parental-leave policies and women’s political representation partially explained cross-national variations in the gender gap. Gender gaps in leave intentions were paradoxically larger in countries with more gender-egalitarian parental-leave policies (i.e., longer leave available to both fathers and mothers). Interestingly, this cross-national variation in the gender gap was driven by cross-national variations in women’s (rather than men’s) leave intentions. Financially generous leave and gender-egalitarian policies (linked to men’s higher uptake in prior research) were not associated with leave intentions in men. Rather, men’s leave intentions were related to their individual gender attitudes. Leave intentions were inversely related to career ambitions. The potential for existing policies to foster gender equality in paid and unpaid work is discussed.

Funding

31600912

430-2018-00361

435-2014-1247

756-2017-0249

ANID/ FONDAP #15130009

ANID/FONDAP #15110006

APVV 20-0319

CRC 152583

Canada Research Chairs

Center for Intercultural and Indigenous Research

Center for Social Conflict and Cohesion Studies

ES/S00274X/1

Early Research Award 152655

Economic and Social Research Council

Faculty of Arts, Masaryk University

GD20CXL06

Guangdong 13th-five Philosophy and Social Science Planning Project

HSE University, RF

Insight Grant 140649

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation

P1ZHP1_184553

P2LAP1_194987

P500PS_206546

PID2019-111549GB-I00/10.13039/501100011033

SSHRC Insight Development Grant

SSHRC Insight Grant

SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellowship

Slovak Research and Development Agency

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

State Research Agency

Swiss National Science Foundation

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© 2023 The Authors. Political Psychology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Society of Political Psychology. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Notes

This is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Political Psychology

Publisher

Wiley

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2023-01-27T16:12:25Z

FOA date

2023-01-27T16:25:22Z

Citation

Published online 23 January 2023

Department

  • Management

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