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Les jours de Papa
Was Geschlechtergleichstellung im Allgemeinen und Elterngeld im Besonderen anbelangt, wird Schweden häufig als Vorbild genannt. Ann-Zofie Duvander (Universität Stockholm) und Mats Johansson (schwedisches Sozialversicherungsamt) untersuchen den Einfluss von drei zwischen 1995 und 2008 in Schweden eingeführten Reformen auf die Aufteilung der Elternzeittage zwischen den Eltern. In Schweden wurde der Erziehungsurlaub mit einkommensabhängigen Leistungen erstmalig im Jahr 1974 eingeführt. In den 1980ern wurde die Dauer der Freistellung auf über ein Jahr ausgeweitet.
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Les jours de Papa
Frecuentemente, Suecia es considerado un modelo a seguir en cuanto a igualdad de género, en general, y por sus subsidios de los permisos de maternidad o paternidad en particular. El país introdujo por primera vez el permiso parental con subsidios calculados en función de los ingresos en 1974 y la duración del mismo se amplió en los años ochenta a más de un año.
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Population Europe Inter-Faces: Zsolt Spéder
Having a child is as legitimate an aim in life as having a Mercedes" - an interview with Zsolt Spéder (Hungarian Demographic Research Institute, Budapest). Questions: 1. What are the most interesting demographic developments in the new European member states in the last decades? 2. What is the reason for this? 3. Will fertility behaviour change soon or always stay low? 4. What is the role of cultural factors compared to economic factors? 5. What do you consider the main cause for fertility decline?
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Population Europe Inter-Faces: Anna Cabré
"Having children is always going to be a risky initiative" - an interview with Anna Cabré Questions: 1. What do you consider the biggest myth in demography? 2. How big a problem do you consider fertility decline to be? 3. How could the gap between the number of children people wish to have and actual birth rates be bridged? 4. From an historical perspective: how have families changed? 5. What circumstances do people need for having children?
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Family Patterns are Changing a Lot
Balancing work and family duties is already quite a challenge for lots of Europeans. Yet in the future, the care-needs of an increasing number of older people have to be met as well. How can modern family structures and childless people cope with these challenges? What can be done by individuals, as well as by society? Population Europe asked Anne-Sophie Parent:
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Books and Reports: The Family, The Market Or The State? Intergenerational Support Under Pressure In Ageing Societies
This book, edited by Gustavo de Santis, touches upon a few of the major challenges that all modern societies will have to face in the near future: how to set up a resilient pay-as-you-go pension system; whether the current balance between expenses and revenues in social expenditure is viable in the future, and, if not, what changes need to be introduced; whether the relative well-being of the current and future cohorts of the old will be preserved, and how their standards of living compare to those experienced by the old in the recent past.
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Books and Reports: Fatherhood In Late Modernity – Cultural Images, Social Practices, Structural Frames
This book, edited by Mechtild Oechsle, Ursula Müller and Sabine Hess, investigates the relationship between cultural representations and social practices of fatherhood. The contributions from different countries and scientific disciplines analyse the existing varieties of fatherhood. They look at social backgrounds, organisational influences, as well as the impact of political and legal interventions.
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Books and Reports: Families And Family Policies
This book, edited by Chiara Saraceno, Jane Lewis, and Arnlaug Leira, is a collection of 51 papers dealing with family policies of the past 69 years. The first volume of the book addresses the origins and social foundations as well as the main actors and drives of family policies. It touches upon themes such as gender, intergenerational obligations and care. The second volume focuses on the goals addressed by family policies as well as on geographical differences.
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Books and Reports: Study "Strong Children - Strong Family"
The Robert Bosch Stiftung presents the study "Starke Kinder - Starke Familie" (in German) on the well-being of children in cities and communities. This study shows how municipalities can support and boost the quality of life, development opportunities, and social participation of children. Making children “strong” in this sense requires a joint effort by families, civil initiatives, businesses and government agencies that also involves the children themselves.
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