Fathers Combining Work and Care: Flexible Work Arrangements and Paternal Involvement Across Financial Situations

Publication date

2026-01-13



Abstract

Flexible work arrangements significantly impact childcare divisions among dual-earner parents, yet few studies address their impact on fathers as primary caregivers. This article explores the relationship between fathers’ ability to work flexibly and their share of childcare responsibility across financial situations. A capabilities perspective is applied to better understand why fathers’ childcare aspirations may not align with what they are capable of in practice. Using 2021 survey data on fathers (n = 493) and mothers (n = 472) of young children in different-sex partnerships from four European countries, multinomial logistic regressions are estimated to predict childcare responsibility. Findings suggest fathers’ spatial flexibility (working from home) increases their likelihood of being the person primarily responsible for childcare, whereas temporal flexibility (varying the start/end times of the working day) does not. Economic conditions influence these dynamics, with financially strained fathers benefiting most from spatial flexibility.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

25

Publisher

Sage journals

Published in

Work, Employment and Society

Recommended citation

Brega, Carla; Yerkes, Mara A. y Grau-Grau, Marc. Fathers Combining Work and Care: Flexible Work Arrangements and Paternal Involvement Across Financial Situations. Work, Employment and Society, 2026. Disponible en <https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/09500170251386322>. Fecha de acceso: 20 mar. 2026. DOI: 10.1177/0950017025138632

Rights

© The Author(s) 2026, Article Reuse Guidelines

© The Author(s) 2026, Article Reuse Guidelines

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