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Research in six large workplaces offering family-friendly employment has found as many as half the employees – including those with caring responsibilities – were unaware of the existence of flexible working options available, even when their employers have adopted a formal ‘work–life balance’ policy.
The study, by researchers from the Sheffield Hallam and City Universities, is one of two research reports being published by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation during National Work–Life Balance Week. Carried out in Sheffield and Canterbury, it investigated the experiences of managers and staff working in local government, supermarkets and retail banking. It found that:
Sue Yeandle, co-author of the study, said: “Employers should clearly be doing more to raise awareness of their family-friendly employment policies among the workforce. The need for better training in how to implement those policies fairly, identified by many managers, is another area that needs to be addressed.
“Government can contribute to the spread of good practice by supporting initiatives to improve communication between employers and care providers. But there cannot be a ‘one size fits all’ solution to work–life balance issues. We found that the needs of employees varied not only between parents and those caring for older relatives, but also according to the type of employment and local factors. These included the availability of alternative childcare facilities, and whether staff could rely on other family members living nearby for informal support.”
| "Employed carers and family-friendly employment policies" by Sue Yeandle, Rosemary Crompton, Andrea Wigfield and Jane Dennett is published for the JRF by The Policy Press and available from Marston Book Services, PO Box 269, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4YN (01235 465500), price £11.95 plus £2.75 p&p.
A full summary of the findings is available here |