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Making it work: fathers’ nonstandard work schedules and parenting activities

Making it work: fathers’ nonstandard work schedules and parenting activities
Making it work: fathers’ nonstandard work schedules and parenting activities
Objective: we examined associations between types of nonstandard work schedules among fathers, couple-level work schedules, and fathers’ parenting activities in infancy and middle childhood in the United Kingdom.

Background: an emerging body of literature has interrogated the implications of fathers’ nonstandard schedules for their parenting. The evidence is mixed owing to the range of child ages investigated and country context. It remains unclear whether nonstandard working hours are related to different types of parenting activities.

Method: the authors used the Millennium Cohort Study, a nationally representative birth cohort from the UK, and two measures of fathers’ parenting: basic care (9-month and 7-year interviews) and play and recreation (7-years). Regression models predicted parenting from fathers’ nonstandard work schedules at 9-months (n=11,412) and 7-years (n=7,791).

Results: fathers who regularly worked night schedules engaged in more basic care in both infancy and middle childhood, compared to fathers who regularly worked standard schedules. Evening schedules were related to lower levels of basic care among infants and 7-year-olds. There were stronger positive associations with parenting when considering mothers’ work schedules. Fathers’ parenting at both ages was higher in families in which both parents worked at nonstandard times or parents were engaged in split-shift schedules.

Conclusion: fathers’ night work schedules were associated with more parenting activities in infancy and middle childhood. The combination of fathers’ and mothers’ work schedules were relatively more important than considering fathers’ work schedules in isolation.
United Kingdom, fathers, nonstandard work schedules, parenting, work-family issues
0022-2445
233-260
Zilanawala, Afshin
dddbeee8-798a-441c-bb79-f0d3908647dd
McMunn, Anne
0c5b8318-39c9-4ae6-8da5-ed2bb286a02b
Zilanawala, Afshin
dddbeee8-798a-441c-bb79-f0d3908647dd
McMunn, Anne
0c5b8318-39c9-4ae6-8da5-ed2bb286a02b

Zilanawala, Afshin and McMunn, Anne (2022) Making it work: fathers’ nonstandard work schedules and parenting activities. Journal of Marriage and Family, 85 (1), 233-260. (doi:10.1111/jomf.12853).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: we examined associations between types of nonstandard work schedules among fathers, couple-level work schedules, and fathers’ parenting activities in infancy and middle childhood in the United Kingdom.

Background: an emerging body of literature has interrogated the implications of fathers’ nonstandard schedules for their parenting. The evidence is mixed owing to the range of child ages investigated and country context. It remains unclear whether nonstandard working hours are related to different types of parenting activities.

Method: the authors used the Millennium Cohort Study, a nationally representative birth cohort from the UK, and two measures of fathers’ parenting: basic care (9-month and 7-year interviews) and play and recreation (7-years). Regression models predicted parenting from fathers’ nonstandard work schedules at 9-months (n=11,412) and 7-years (n=7,791).

Results: fathers who regularly worked night schedules engaged in more basic care in both infancy and middle childhood, compared to fathers who regularly worked standard schedules. Evening schedules were related to lower levels of basic care among infants and 7-year-olds. There were stronger positive associations with parenting when considering mothers’ work schedules. Fathers’ parenting at both ages was higher in families in which both parents worked at nonstandard times or parents were engaged in split-shift schedules.

Conclusion: fathers’ night work schedules were associated with more parenting activities in infancy and middle childhood. The combination of fathers’ and mothers’ work schedules were relatively more important than considering fathers’ work schedules in isolation.

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JMF_RNR2_v1 - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 13 March 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 June 2022
Published date: 12 June 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: Research support for this work was provided by the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ES/R003114/1; ES/J019119/1). The authors are grateful for inspiration from Harriet Presser. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Journal of Marriage and Family published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of National Council on Family Relations.
Keywords: United Kingdom, fathers, nonstandard work schedules, parenting, work-family issues

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 456717
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456717
ISSN: 0022-2445
PURE UUID: 176e937e-b037-418f-bb68-fb7e7b39b07d
ORCID for Afshin Zilanawala: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1439-6128

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Date deposited: 10 May 2022 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:18

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Author: Anne McMunn

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