ABSTRACT
Existing research points towards an overall intensification of parenting expectations including newer expectations for fathers’ involvement in caregiving. At the same time, the ideal worker norm persists, and employers continue to expect men’s full and uninterrupted work commitment. This article explores what these competing expectations attached to work and parenting mean for single fathers. To do so, the article draws on 30 in-depth interviews with a sample of working single fathers with primary caregiving responsibility in the United States and differentiates between those with white- and blue-collar jobs. The study finds that both white- and blue-collar single fathers prioritize caregiving and resist the ideal worker norm and, as a result, experience work–family conflict. Resolving this conflict becomes single fathers’ individual responsibility, and the resources to resolve it are primarily available to white-collar men in the form of understanding supervisors and access to workplace flexibility. Blue-collar single fathers need to be more creative and resourceful in reconciling their caregiving and breadwinning roles. Inability to resolve work–family conflict can lead to job penalties such as reduced income and/or a job loss, which are found across different job types.
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Acknowledgement
A version of this manuscript was presented at the 2022 Work and Family Researchers Network conference. I would like to thank Ann Meier, Kathy Hull, Rachel Schurman and the anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments and feedback on previous drafts of this manuscript.
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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
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Aimzhan Iztayeva
Aimzhan Iztayeva is a PhD candidate in sociology at the University of Minnesota – Twin Cities. Her research interests include gender, work and family with particular focus on primary caregiving and employment discrimination.