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Current Filters: New in five years [remove]; Pub Year:2011 [remove]; Classification:Families & Work [remove];
38 results found.|
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Childcare Affordability Pilots (CAP09): 100% Costs, Disabled Children and Actual Costs pilots evaluation summary A summary of evaluations of three pilot child care tax credit programs in England |
Executive Summary |
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Childcare Affordability Pilots (CAP09): 100% Costs Pilot: The importance of cost as a driver of family decisions about work and childcare: A data analysis report An evaluation of a pilot program in England to pay 100 percent of out-of-work families' child care expenses that examines the impact of an offer to enroll in the program on families' employment and child care outcomes |
Reports & Papers |
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Childcare Affordability Pilots (CAP09): 100% Costs Pilot: The importance of cost as a driver of family decisions about work and childcare: A data analysis report [Executive summary] A summary of an evaluation of a pilot program in England to pay 100 percent of out-of-work families' child care expenses that examines the impact of an offer to enroll in the program on families' employment and child care outcomes |
Executive Summary |
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Childcare Affordability Pilots (CAP09): Disabled Children's Pilot: The importance of cost as a driver of family decisions about work and childcare: A data analysis report An evaluation of a pilot program in England to increase the child care tax credit amount allowed for families with disabled children that examines the impact of an offer to enroll in the program on families' employment and child care outcomes |
Reports & Papers |
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Childcare Affordability Pilots (CAP09): Disabled Children's Pilot: The importance of cost as a driver of family decisions about work and childcare: A data analysis report [Executive summary] A summary of an evaluation of a pilot program in England to increase the child care tax credit amount allowed for families with disabled children that examines the impact of an offer to enroll in the program on families' employment and child care outcomes |
Executive Summary |
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Childcare: Failing to meet the needs of working parents A discussion of parents' work schedules and child care use in the United Kingdom and of issues related to accessing affordable, flexible child care |
Other |
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Childcare: Failing to meet the needs of working parents [Executive summary] A summary of a discussion of parents' work schedules and child care use in the United Kingdom and of issues related to accessing affordable, flexible child care |
Executive Summary |
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Child care, maternal employment and persistence: A natural experiment from Spain A study of the effects of subsidized child care on maternal labor force participation in Spain, based on an analysis of national labor force data and the staggered regional implementation of universal child care for 3 year-old children |
Reports & Papers |
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Child care voucher and labour market behaviour: Experimental evidence from Finland An examination of the relationship between the introduction of private child care vouchers in 1994 and both labor force participation and use of private and public child care by mothers between 1995 and 1997, based on data from 3,433 children from birth through 6-years-old in Finland |
Reports & Papers |
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Difference's by mother's education in the effect of childcare on child obesity A study of the mediating role time spent in child care plays in the relationship of maternal employment to child obesity, based on an analysis of data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) Core and Child Development Supplement |
Reports & Papers |
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Does family-friendly policy matter?: Testing its impact on turnover and performance A study of the relationship between four types of family friendly policies--child care subsidies, paid leave for family care, telecommuting, and alternative work schedules--and federal agency's performance and turnover rates, based on data from 2004 and 2006 Federal Human Capital Surveys and over 31 individual agencies' Performance and Accountability Reports for fiscal years 2005 and 2007 |
Reports & Papers |
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Estimating net child care price elasticities of partnered women with pre-school children using a discrete structural labour supply-child care model A study of the relationship of changes in families' child care expenses to changes in maternal labor supply in Australia, based on an analysis of data from the 2005 through 2007 waves of an annual panel survey of approximately 7,000 households |
Reports & Papers |
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Estimating net child care price elasticities of partnered women with pre-school children using a discrete structural labour supply-child care model [Executive summary] A summary of a study of the relationship of changes in families' child care expenses to changes in maternal labor supply in Australia, based on an analysis of data from the 2005 through 2007 waves of an annual panel survey of approximately 7,000 households |
Executive Summary |
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An exploratory study of the impacts of an employer-supported child care A study of relationships among reported employee experiences with an employer-sponsored child care voucher program, satisfaction with child care, and perceived of benefits to work-life balance, based on data from 776 employees with children at Cornell University in Ithaca |
Reports & Papers |
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Exploring the impacts of public childcare on mothers and children in Italy: Does rationing play a role? A study of the relationship of publicly funded child care availability to mothers' labor force participation and children's language skills in Italy |
Reports & Papers |
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Exploring the impacts of public childcare on mothers and children in Italy: Does rationing play a role? A study of the relationship of publicly funded child care availability to mothers' labor force participation and children's language skills in Italy |
Reports & Papers |
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Family labor participation and child care decisions: The role of grannies A study of child care provided by grandmothers in 10 European countries and its relationship to labor force participation of grandmothers and their children, based on an analysis of data from 1,689 grandmothers between 50 and 65 years old with grandchildren under age 13 from the longitudinal, cross-national Survey of Health, Aging, and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) |
Reports & Papers |
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The impact of child care problems on employment: Findings from a national survey of US parents A study of self-reported changes in parental employment arrangements resulting from problems securing child care for children with chronic illness and/or behavior problems, based on a nationally-representative survey of 1431 households |
Reports & Papers |
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Intergenerational transmission of skills during childhood and optimal social policy An examination of optimal tax policy and optimal quality of child care services in a model of parental child care decisionmaking |
Reports & Papers |
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Intra-household work timing: The effect on joint activities and the demand for child care An examination of work schedules in dual-earner households in the Netherlands and the influence of work schedules on child care demand and time spent jointly on leisure, household chores, and childrearing |
Reports & Papers |
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Intra-household work timing: The effect on joint activities and the demand for child care An examination of work schedules in dual-earner households in the Netherlands and the influence of work schedules on child care demand and time spent jointly on leisure, household chores, and childrearing |
Reports & Papers |
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Intra-household work timing: The effect on joint activities and the demand for child care An examination of work schedules in dual-earner households in the Netherlands and the influence of work schedules on child care demand and time spent jointly on leisure, household chores, and childrearing |
Reports & Papers
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Labor supply and child care choices in a rationed child care market A study of the relationship of maternal labor force participation to child care choices in Germany, accounting for access restrictions related to child care costs and availability, based on a subsample of 1,495 households from the German Socio-Economic Panel |
Reports & Papers |
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Making work pay: The childcare trap A discussion of the challenges to accessing child care presented by high costs and the difficulty they present to low-income parents searching for work in the United Kingdom |
Fact Sheets & Briefs |
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Minnesota Child Care Choices: Families' employment patterns and child care-related work disruptions Findings from a longitudinal study of the child care decision-making processes of low-income families in Minnesota that examine parents' employment experiences and connections between child care and work, based on analyses of three subsamples from a survey of 323 low-income parents with at least one child age 6 or under who have applied for child care assistance or welfare and live in one of seven participating counties that consisted of 136 parents in paid employment, 282 labor force participants, and 102 parents with child care problems |
Fact Sheets & Briefs |
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Peer Reviewed Journal