www.maxemilking.com
My findings need not imply that family-friendly scheduling is bad policy, but if early meetings backfire for working-class politicians, that trade-off needs to be part of the conversation. 9/10
My findings need not imply that family-friendly scheduling is bad policy, but if early meetings backfire for working-class politicians, that trade-off needs to be part of the conversation. 9/10
These jobs are typically in the low-skilled/service sector. 8/10
These jobs are typically in the low-skilled/service sector. 8/10
I discuss possible reasons for this null result in the paper.🤔7/10
I discuss possible reasons for this null result in the paper.🤔7/10
Attendance is generally high, but each session sees 10–15% absence due to illness, childcare, urgent work, etc. 3/10
Attendance is generally high, but each session sees 10–15% absence due to illness, childcare, urgent work, etc. 3/10
This challenges the idea that scheduling reforms are a silver bullet for inclusion. 2/10
This challenges the idea that scheduling reforms are a silver bullet for inclusion. 2/10
My findings need not imply that family-friendly scheduling is bad policy, but if early meetings backfire for working-class politicians, that trade-off needs to be part of the conversation. 9/10
My findings need not imply that family-friendly scheduling is bad policy, but if early meetings backfire for working-class politicians, that trade-off needs to be part of the conversation. 9/10
These jobs are typically in the low-skilled/service sector. 8/10
These jobs are typically in the low-skilled/service sector. 8/10
I discuss possible reasons for this null result in the paper. 7/10
I discuss possible reasons for this null result in the paper. 7/10
Attendance is generally high, but each session sees 10–15% absence due to illness, childcare, urgent work, or similar. 3/10
Attendance is generally high, but each session sees 10–15% absence due to illness, childcare, urgent work, or similar. 3/10
This challenges the idea that scheduling reforms are a silver bullet for inclusion. 2/10
This challenges the idea that scheduling reforms are a silver bullet for inclusion. 2/10
Full replication text here: www.econstor.eu/handle/10419...
Full replication text here: www.econstor.eu/handle/10419...