One Ph.D. candidate in sociology interested in conducting research on care leave policies, trade unions, or the politics of family policy or a combination of these topics: The candidate should have a Masters' degree (or near-completion), training in quantitative methods, and an appreciation for qualitative approaches. A main task for the Ph.D. student will be to collect the policy measures that will comprise the Care Leave Policy data set. The Ph.D. candidate will be welcome to use these measures in their own research. Applications open 1 September 2025 and close 1 October 2025. Please email cassandra.engeman[at]sofi.su.se to get on an emailing list and get notified about the opening of the call. Read the call for applications here.
Two Post-doctoral Researchers to use process-tracing techniques to study the adoption of new leave provisions in the Netherlands and France (one for each country): The candidate should have a Ph.D. in sociology, political science, or related social science field. Proficiency in either French or Dutch is preferred. Please express your interest by emailing cassandra.engeman[at]sofi.su.se, and you will be notified when the call for applications open.
About the project:
Promoting work-life balance has been a focus of recent directives from the European Commission and a source of policy innovation in several countries. Social policies that make time for family and self-care are important tools for building sustainable work, but countries vary considerably in the extent to which such tools are available. Trade union organizations may play an important role for developing statutory care-related leave rights and protections, particularly as women still provide a bulk of family caregiving and now constitute a majority or near-majority of union members in many countries.
This project will use a novel, mixed-method design to investigate organized labour's relationships to national leave policies that grant time-off from work to address care needs, including leave to care for a child, aging parent, or ill spouse or to address self-care needs through sick leave or disability benefits. Quantitative analyses will examine union-policy relationships across rich democracies starting in 1965, and qualitative analyses will examine organized labour's policy advocacy in Ireland, France and the Netherlands. Analyses of predictors will distinguish between different types of social provisions, consider differences in trade unions and the types of workers they represent, investigate the mechanisms of potential union influence over policy, and compare union-policy relationships across different institutional contexts.
A central ambition of the project is to integrate the interdisciplinary fields of comparative policy analysis and social movement research to advance comparative labour studies and develop new theories of union-policy relationships. The project will additionally develop data infrastructures, offering much-needed longitudinal, comparative data on different types of care leave provisions. Overall, the project will assess the extent to which organized labour can be a partner for developing social policies that promote sustainable work for the future.