Events

Fathers’ leave increases attitudinal gender equality

  • 18 Jan 2022

    12:30-14:00, Online and Clay Room, Nuffield College

  • Political Science Seminars   Add to Calendar
Speaker: Petra Schleiter

University of Oxford

Please note: This is a hybrid event. You can join online (please contact politics.secretary@nuffield.ox.ac.uk) or you can attend in-person (Clay Room, Nuffield College, L staircase). However, if you attend in-person, please note that a maximum room capacity of 30 will be in operation and masks must be worn at all times.

[Joint work with Margit Tavits,Jonathan Homola, and Dalston Ward)

Abstract: Does fathers’ leave, a policy intervention that disrupts  traditional gender roles, promote more gender-equitable attitudes? We examine this question by studying a policy reform in Estonia that tripled the length of fathers’ leave for children born on or after July 1, 2020. The reform promoted fathers as care givers – it offered both parents the opportunity to conceive of their social roles in a less traditional fashion and to thereby reassess traditional beliefs about the appropriate roles and essential traits of men and women.  Using an innovative design, we combine this natural experiment with a unique survey  of new parents whose children were born in the six months before (N = 614) and after (N = 748) the reform.  The reform led to a sizeable rise in gender-egalitarian views in the economic, social, and political domains among both mothers and fathers. Support for positive action  policies, which promote women at the expense of men, only increased among mothers but not fathers.  We also examine the response of the general public to the reform, based on an informational,  indirect treatment (in contrast to direct exposure of new parents) and find no effects. These results show that direct exposure to progressive social policy has the power to weaken patriarchal attitudes, a finding that is of considerable practical relevance given the continued prevalence of attitudinal gender bias even in developed democracies.

The Political Science Seminar Series is convened by Pepper Culpepper, Ezequiel Gonzalez Ocantos and Jane Green. For more information on this or any of the seminars in the series, please contact politics.secretary@nuffield.ox.ac.uk