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Howard's Social Policies Concerning Relationships, Work and Families

Liz van Acker
Abstract
In Australia, the federal government is attempting to strengthen families at a time when women and men have greater choice in terms of how they conduct their personal relationships. This article compares the 'soft' social policies that provide family relationship programs with the 'hard' economic policies of labour market reforms. It analyses some of the policies that affect work life balance, demonstrating that while the federal government is prepared to invest in programs to strengthen family relationships, it does not invest sufficiently in other measures such as family friendly work policies and paid maternity leave. The government's rhetoric promotes the wellbeing of 'the family'; its policies do not. On the one hand, the government attempts to encourage robust relationships by investing in early intervention programs. It has also recently invested in Family Relationship Centres to facilitate the process of family relationships breakdown. On the other hand, it is increasing the demands on labour. These policies are inconsistent in supporting families. In fact, there is a lack of wholeof- government policy development dealing with work and family issues. Consequently, individuals attempting to manage their private relationships and working lives often have inadequate options when endeavouring to balance the two.

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Journal Article

The Work/Life Collision: What Work is Doing to Australians and What to Do about It [Book Review]

Marian Baird
- 01 Nov 2006 - 
TL;DR: The work/life collision: What Work is Doing to Australians and What to Do about It by Barbara Pocock, Federation Press, Leichhardt, 2003 as discussed by the authors, pp. xi + 288.
References
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Report SeriesDOI

Female Labour Force Participation

TL;DR: The authors examined the determinants of female labour force participation in OECD countries, including a number of policy instruments such as the tax treatment of second earners (relative to single individuals), childcare subsidies, child benefits, paid maternity and parental leaves, and tax incentives to sharing market work between spouses.

The case for marriage

TL;DR: The case for marriage is discussed in this paper, where Waite and Gallagher argue that married people are happier, healthier, and better off than those who are not in a union.
Posted Content

Female Labour Force Participation: Past Trends and Main Determinants in OECD Countries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the determinants of female labour force participation in OECD countries, including a number of policy instruments such as the tax treatment of second earners (relative to single individuals), childcare subsidies, child benefits, paid maternity and parental leaves, and tax incentives to sharing market work between spouses.