Family Policy, Gender and Intersecting Inequalities (Part I)

Tuesday, 8 July 2025: 15:00-16:45
Location: SJES003 (Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences (JES))
RC06 Family Research (host committee)
RC19 Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy

Language: English

This panel expects to contribute to ongoing research and discussions regarding ‘new family policy’ meaning new understandings and forms of provision to provide support to the caring function of increasingly diverse and complex family units. The three broad areas we include under the rubric of family policy are cash transfers to families and children, parental leave provision and childcare services. We welcome papers that critically question the universalising appeal of work-life balance policies mostly designed to cater for the needs of the ‘nuclear family’ and focus on how policy responds to diversity and change in family life especially with a gender and intersectional lense. Examples of such diversity are lone parent families, families in transition, families with a severely ill or disabled child, multi-generational and large families. From the perspective of policy, we are interested in papers that address the need for inclusive, flexible and complementary policy designs and mechanisms. Research looking at the outcomes of specific family policy is also of interest. We welcome contributions that employ different theoretical (such as for instance feminist interpretations of social policy reform) and analytical frameworks and adopt different methodological approaches. We also welcome single country cases and comparative approaches both from the Global North and South.

Session Organizers:
Ivana DOBROTIC, University of Zagreb, Croatia and Margarita LEÓN BORJA, Universitat Autonoma Barcelona, Spain
Oral Presentations
Intersectionality and Family Policy Research: Four Approaches
Rossella CICCIA, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Beyond Family: How Support Networks Shape Urban Women's Work Participation
Aditi B PRASAD, International Institute for Population Sciences, India, India
Intersectional Family Policies in the EU: Comparing Two Cases Studies
Natalia TOSONI, University of Bologna, Italy; Mara A. YERKES, Utrecht University, Netherlands
Identifying Demotherisation Regimes: A Comparison across OECD Countries
Cristina SOLERA, University of Turin, Italy; Nicolò MARCHESINI, CNR, Italy; Emmanuele PAVOLINI, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
(New) Fathers in Bulgaria: Towards More Equal Participation in Childcare and More Shared Parental Leave
Tatyana KOTZEVA, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Institute for Population and Human Studies, Bulgaria; Elitsa DIMITROVA, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Institute for Population and Human Studies, Bulgaria; Irena GEORGIEVA, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Institute for Population and Human Studies, Bulgaria; Kalina ILIEVA
Distributed Papers