Mapping the Unknown: Research Gaps in Parenting Leave Inequality Research in Europe

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Abstract

This report was produced within COST Action CA21150 “Parental Leave Policies and Social Sustainability(Sustainability@Leave)”, Working Group 2, and provides a systematic assessment of knowledge gaps inEuropean research on parenting leave and social inequalities.Parenting leave policies constitute a key pillar of social sustainability, with demonstrated relevance forgender equality, labour market participation, health, and child well-being. While European research onparenting leave has expanded significantly over recent decades, the available evidence remainsfragmented and uneven. Drawing on a narrative review of more than 400 publications from 24 Europeancountries, this report maps which dimensions of inequality have been most extensively studied andidentifies where substantial blind spots persist across countries, social groups, and levels of analysis.The review shows that research has focused predominantly on gender, particularly mothers’ employmenttrajectories and fathers’ take-up of leave. By contrast, other crucial dimensions of inequality, includinghealth, disability, well-being, citizenship, ethnicity, non-standard employment, and diverse family forms,remain marginal in the literature. In addition, most studies implicitly centre on parents in stable, standardemployment, resulting in limited evidence on the experiences of precarious workers, the self-employed,migrants, and low-income families. These biases restrict the capacity of current research to evaluatewhether parenting leave policies reduce inequalities broadly or primarily benefit already advantagedgroups.The report makes a central contribution by systematically linking policy design features (eligibility rules,benefit levels, individualisation, flexibility) with policy outcomes (leave take-up and longer-term inequalityeffects) and by highlighting the need for more intersectional, multi-level, and comparative research. Itdemonstrates that although a gender lens remains central to parental leave policies, future researchshould adopt a broader perspective to examine how multiple inequalities intersect. Strengthening datainfrastructures, improving the measurement of leave use, and integrating qualitative and quantitativeapproaches are essential for advancing policy-relevant evidence.Policy recommendations emphasise the importance of inclusive parenting leave designs thataccommodate diverse employment trajectories, ensure adequate income replacement, and supportindividual entitlements for both parents. The report also underlines the need for systematic monitoringof the EU Work–Life Balance Directive, not only in terms of legal compliance but with regard to itsdistributional effects across social groups and countries. By identifying where evidence is missing, thisreport provides a strategic agenda for future research aimed at improving the inequality-reducingpotential of parenting leave policies in Europe.

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