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Methodological Challenges in Paid Parental Leave Research and Policy
WORKSHOP
Living Conditions
22 APR 2025

Living Conditions Department at LISER is hosting the international workshop titled "Methodological Challenges in Paid Parental Leave Research and Policy." This event will take place on May 22 and 23, 2025, as part of the EU COST Action project Sustainability@Leave (https://sustainable-leave-policies.eu/).

ABOUT THE EVENT

Methodological Challenges in Paid Parental Leave Research and Policy

22-23 May 2025 – Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research (LISER)

Maison des Sciences Humaines – Conference room on the 1st floor
11, Porte des Sciences
L-4366 Esch-sur-Alzette/Belval, Luxembourg

Context
The 2019 EU Directive on Work-Life Balance for Parents and Carers issued a set of legislative actions aimed at supporting work-life balance, encouraging equal sharing of informal care between parents and increasing women’s participation in the labour market. Actions under the directive include continued monitoring of policy outcomes and improved data on leave take-up and use of flexible work arrangements. However, sufficient data for adequate policy evaluation are still out-of-reach.

Aims
This event will bring together renowned international policy experts from government institutions, research centers, and academia, including representatives from the ILO, OECD, European Commission, EIGE, EUROFOUND, EUROSTAT, ESS, ISSP, University College London, University of Stockholm and LISER among others. The workshop aims to develop the data needed for rigorous study of parenting leave policy outcomes. Participants will share the latest progress toward filling data gaps, the challenges of data collection and future policy evaluation.

We invite experts and policymakers who are in key positions to address at least one of four challenges:

  1. Synthesizing leave terminology
    • What are the key dimensions of leave policy? How does leave policy terminology differ across countries or regions?
    • How have researchers defined leave provisions in different or contradictory ways?
    • What attempts have been made to standardise parental leave terminology across international or regional bodies, such as the EU, OECD, or the ILO?
    • To what extent do stakeholders use a common language when discussing parenting leave policies? What challenges arise from differing terminologies, and how can standardisation efforts address these challenges?
    • What are the implications of varied or inconsistent leave policy terminology for research, policy-making, and implementation?
  2. Advancing administrative data
    • Who is overlooked by existing administrative data? And what information would benefit from linking points in administrative data?
    • What kind of administrative data do we need in order to compare leave takeup between countries and efficiently monitor EU Directives?
    • How can statistical offices adapt to new data needs? And how can they coordinate with government agencies tasked with monitoring progress toward EU equality goals, for example?
  3. Improving survey data
    • What are some of the most important questions that are not currently asked in European surveys?
    • How can new questions be introduced to already existing European surveys?
    • How can leave policy research benefit from survey data? What are some unique data contributions from survey data compared to administrative data?
  4. Developing policy indicators
    • What policy indicators do we really need? And to what end?
    • How can we incorporate eligibility requirements in policy measures? How can we account for the inclusivity of leave policies, such as their accessibility to non-traditional workers (e.g. self-employed, platform workers) and families (e.g., LGBTQ+ parents, adoptive parents)?
    • How should we account for differences in paid versus unpaid leave, as well as variations in wage replacement rates, when developing indicators?
    • How can we ensure that indicators developed in one context are relevant and adaptable to different countries or regions? What role do international organisations play in standardising these indicators?
    • What mechanisms do we need to put in place to facilitate the collaboration of different stakeholders (e.g., policymakers, researchers, advocacy groups) when developing and standardising leave policy indicators?

Within each of the above four challenge areas, we will discuss the child’s perspective in leave policies and outcomes, long- and short-term alternatives for solving data challenges, and how to make data accessible to researchers and policymakers. At the workshop, members of the COST-Action team will report on their assessments of issues with regard to data quality, which will provide a basis for further discussions.


Organising Committee:


Cassandra Engeman | Stockholm University

Ásdís Aðalbjörg Arnalds | University of Iceland

Marie Valentova | Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research (LISER)

Ivana Dobrotić | University of Zagreb

Ann-Zofie Duvander | Stockholm University

Margaret O’Brien | University College London

WORKSHOP