World & I Online Magazine  
World & I School | World & I Homeschool | World & I College | World & I Library
 Username:   Password:     Subscribe   Register               About Us | Contact Us | FAQs
18-Year Archive Peoples of the World Book Review Worldwide Folktales Fathers of Faith
Search  
Sort by: Results Listed:
Date Range:    Advanced Search

Online Magazine
 
  Current Issue
Editorial
Current Issue
The Arts
Life
Natural Science
Culture
Book World
Modern Thought
  Resources
18-Year Archive
American Waves
Book Reviews
Ceremonies/Festivities
Eye on the High Court
Fathers of Faith
Footsteps of Lincoln
Millennial Moments
Peoples of the World
Profiles in Character
Teacher's Guide
Traveling the Globe
Worldwide Folktales
Writers and Writing

A Question of Balance


Article # : 11010 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 6 / 1986  2,026 Words
Author : Nancy Wolfe
Nancy Wolfe is a Costa Rican-based journalist.

       What would you think about a country where one-quarter of the children are poor, where 50 percent of the children can expect to live part of their lives in a female-headed household, and where an estimated two million to seven million children are left alone after school every day? Unfortunately, this is the case in the United States today.
       
        One of the reasons for this situation, a new study says, is the lack of recognition by the country's employers of changes that have taken place in the American family in the past 20 years. That the average family no longer consists of a working father, a stay-at-home mother, and 2.5 kids is well known, and the fact that more and more mothers are in the work force has also been widely discussed.
       
        A group called the Family Policy Panel (of the United Nations Association of the United States) reports that both men and women are feeling increased conflict between their jobs and their families, and that U.S. employers, unlike those in other countries, have not caught up with the times in their personnel policies. The old image of the family composed of the breadwinner husband and the housekeeper mother now applies to only 10 percent of the population. And yet the panel--composed of prominent business, education, labor, and academic leaders--found that policies regarding maternity leave, fringe benefits, child care, health care, and equal pay are still mostly greed to the old family makeup. Even our schools and most other societal institutions do not take the changes into account.
       
        Panel member Rosalie Wolf of the International Paper Company says: "Employers prefer to assume that solving family problems is the employee's job, a position that evolved when employees were mostly married males who were presumed to have homemaker wives. With more women in the work forces…employers assume that treating women equally means ignoring their family problems, too."
       
        The Family Policy Panel believes that the government and private industry must work together to allow working parents "… to concentrate on their jobs without neglecting their families. We can no longer leave to chance an area of policy so primary to our country's social and economic fabric."
       
        If these women lived in any of 100 other countries in the world, they would have had some type of job-protected maternity leave with at least partial wage replacement. In the Western industrialized countries new mothers get anywhere from 16 week to one year of
... Read Full Article


Look for this article in Ask.com

Copyright © 2004 The World & I. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy