posted on 2015-07-22, 09:20authored byOxana Golynker
This paper provides a critical assessment of the family-friendly reform of employment law in the UK.
It begins with the analysis of the EU policies on work-life balance as the important context of the
reform in the UK. The second part of the paper provides and outline of the family-friendly provisions
introduced by the Labour and Coalition Governments between 1997 and 2015 and investigates the
rationale behind the reform. The paper questions the consistency of the approach to the familyfriendly
reform of employment law adopted by the Labour and Coalition governments. It argues that
the economic rationale has underpinned the flexibility aspect of family-friendly agenda in both EU
and UK policies. In its final part, the paper analyses the flaws in the regulation of family-friendly
entitlements and argues that, without proper incentives and guarantees, the reform is unlikely to
provide working parents and carers with a real choice and flexibility.
History
Citation
Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF ARTS, HUMANITIES AND LAW/School of Law