Doctoral Degrees (Mercantile Law)
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Doctoral Degrees (Mercantile Law) by Subject "Child care services -- Law and legislation"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemThe integration of work and parenting: a comparative legal analysis(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2018-03) Rossouw, Elzaan; Garbers, C.; Calitz, K.; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Law. Department of Mercantile Law.ENGLISH ABSTRACT : Given the importance of parental care to children, parents and broader society and the apparent conflict between work and adequate parental care, this study evaluates the legal facilitation of the integration of work and care across nine countries, including South Africa. The study recognises that legal operationalisation of the integration of work and care primarily takes place at domestic legislative level and shows that this happens against the backdrop of widespread recognition of the importance of the family and care at the international, regional and constitutional levels. The study builds on the reality that domestic legislation in this context consists of (a combination of) equality law and specific rights contained in employment standards legislation. The comparative review of equality law as applied in the area of the work-care conflict shows that, despite the potential and promise that equality law holds to facilitate the integration of work and care, this potential has not been realised and probably will not be in future. This necessarily shifts the focus to an approach founded on the extension of specific rights related to time off or leave, as well as flexible working, to employees in order to enable them effectively to combine work and caregiving. The comparative review of specific rights in this area leads to the conclusion that South Africa lags far behind certain developed and comparable developing countries in its legislative recognition of the importance of caregiving and in its subsequent level of employment rights extended to caregivers. Given the ample room for improvement, suggestions for legislative reform are made based on the comparative experience of other countries