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June 4, 2020

A Generation of Working Mothers Face Employment Disparities

This week, the New York Times reports that the temporary setbacks to gender parity in the workplace are in danger of being close to permanent, leaving a whole generation of women behind their male cohort in the workplace. There has been a decade of fragile progress since the Great Recession, and in February, women represented a majority of civilian, non-farm workers employed in the country. 

But that changed as soon as the lockdown hit, and also laid bare how tenuous such a milestone was with much of the job gains in the last decade in industries vulnerable to any crisis, let alone one of this magnitude.

As layoffs have continued, and the unemployment ranks swell toward 40 million, women have been affected disproportionately and mothers are affected doubly so as they were already more likely to handle the majority of childcare responsibilities and require them to make greater financial and time-related sacrifices.

One major hurdle, according to the Times, is that employers tend to favor hours logged at work, and as the economy starts reopening women are at a numerical disadvantage from short-term layoffs. However, longer-term issues also plague their chances as women are more likely to leave the workforce for a period of time for childcare, and without federal guarantees over employment and parental leave, women can find themselves permanently behind.

In addition to the financial issues, the pandemic has exacerbated problems for those who can work from home, but who also have children. Suddenly, women are performing all of the childcare duties that were previously performed by school, daycare or domestic workers while still working full-time. 

One of the women, whose husband was still working as a delivery driver, was interviewed by the Times reported spending all day doing childcare, and only after children were in bed could she start her 8 hours of work as a digital librarian.

As we’ve argued before, without proper universal childcare policies in the United States, what is, thus far a temporary problem will turn into a full-blown crisis for women who want to remain in the workforce. We can ill-afford to go backwards after the gains women have fought hard for.

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Emergency Paid Leave and Sick Days under Fire in New Stimulus Negotiations

December 21, 2020
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As Congress races to finalize a new round of stimulus for the nation, stricken at the moment with the winter surge that epidemiologists predicted, workers are under threat of losing access to paid emergency leave as well as paid sick days. According to the National Partnership for Women & Families, allowing such provisions to expire would be a grave mistake.

Childcare Costs Skyrocket in 2020

December 9, 2020
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Child care has not been affordable for a long time now, especially not for poor and working class parents, but with the pandemic forcing the closure of schools and childcare facilities across the country, costs have shot up even more as parents scramble to figure out what to do with their children as they try to balance work and family.

Special Issue of Harvard Law & Policy Review Focuses on Pregnancy

December 7, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
The Harvard Law & Policy review has recently devoted an issue to the special theme of “The Politics of Pregnancy.” It contains numerous responses to and discussions of myriad political issues of pregnancy in the U.S. and abroad, including increased emphasis on maternal health, abortion access, surrogacy, and state intervention into matters of women’s health, including the effects of incarceration on mothers.

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