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Job Contract at Birth of the First Child as a Predictor of Women's Labor Market Attachment: Trajectory Analyses over 11 Years




TekijätPeutere L, Vahtera J, Kivimaki M, Pentti J, Virtanen P

KustantajaROSKILDE UNIV

Julkaisuvuosi2015

JournalNordic Journal of Working Life Studies

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiNORDIC JOURNAL OF WORKING LIFE STUDIES

Lehden akronyymiNORD J WORKING LIFE

Vuosikerta5

Numero1

Aloitussivu9

Lopetussivu30

Sivujen määrä22

ISSN2245-0157

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.19154/njwls.v5i1.4763


Tiivistelmä
There is a lot of evidence that pre-birth employment and access to parental leave are important predictors of mothers' labor market attachment after childbirth. This register-based study from Finland aimed to analyze in which ways the type of job contract (none, temporary, or permanent) at the start of maternity leave predicts labor market attachment in the long term. The mother cohorts were followed up for 11 years. Labor market attachment was analyzed with latent class growth analysis, which makes it possible to identify subgroups with differing track and level of development. Lack of employment and having a temporary contract at baseline were associated with slower and weaker labor market attachment irrespective of mother's age, socioeconomic status, and subsequent births. These findings suggest that the polarization of women into the core and periphery of the labor market structure tends to continue after the birth of the first child. Temporary employment might be an obstacle for having rights for a job-protected family leave and have long-term consequences on the continuity of employment and the division of paid and unpaid work in the family.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:55