The research team
University of Melbourne:
- Associate Professor Alysia Blackham
- Professor Leah Ruppanner
- Professor Beth Gaze
- Professor Susan Ainsworth
- Dr. Brendan Churchill
- Kate Dangar, Research Project Manager
- Mira Gunawansa, Research Project Manager
- Lía Acosta Rueda, Research Assistant
- Cameron Patrick, Statistical Consultant
What was the research about?
The team researched pregnancy, parenting, caregiving and gender equality in the public sector. It looked at:
- Gender differences in accessing leave and flexible work options
- How the Gender Equality Act 2020 can address caregiving-related challenges.
How was the research conducted?
The researchers used mixed methods, including:
- desktop data collection
- surveys
- analysing data from the 2021 People matter survey
- interviews.
It used 349 survey responses and 74 interviews. Participants came from 23 public sector workplaces.
What did the research find?
- Victoria's public sector is good at offering flexible work.
- More women than men take care of loved ones and need to use flexible work and leave for caring.
- Most people didn't know about their rights as carers in the workplace.
- Access to leave and flexible working arrangements for carers depends on individual managers. Many felt these benefits were difficult to access.
- COVID-19 made it easier for carers to work flexibly. Carers felt anxious about the return to inflexible arrangements.
- Caregivers, especially working mothers and women aged 50+ faced barriers to career advancement.
- Caregivers faced discrimination in the workplace, especially those from diverse backgrounds.
- Insecure work made discrimination worse. Some carers didn't take leave because they worried about their jobs.
- People taking leave due to trauma, like miscarriage or domestic violence, had less support.
Recommendations
Recommendations for public sector organisations
- Revise the Victorian Public Service Enterprise Agreement 2020. Develop an inclusive definition of caregiving.
- Learn how caregivers use different types of leave for caregiving responsibilities. This includes personal leave, unpaid leave and annual leave.
- Conduct an annual audit on leave allowances.
- Increase personal leave allowances.
- Make flexible working the standard for everyone.
- Track the use of caregiving entitlements (including requests and actual use).
- Include managing flexible work in performance reviews for managers.
- Make sure staff know their rights as caregivers and different leave options.
- Train all managers on caring, workplace flexibility and leave entitlements.
Recommendations for managers and HR departments
- Lead by example. Role model the use of leave or flexible work for caring needs.
- Discuss flexible work arrangements in regular check-ins with staff.
- Make it easier for staff to find information on leave options.
- Support caregivers to apply for promotions.
- Create staff networks for people with caring responsibilities to connect.
- Support people returning to work after long periods of leave for caregiving.
Recommendations for the Commission
- Track insecure work in the Victorian public sector. Look at how this affects caregivers.
- Encourage organisations to collect data on the caring responsibilities of their staff.
Read the full report
Caring and Workplace Gender Equality in Victoria's Public Sector
(opens in a new window)
Citing this research
Dangar K, Gunawansa M, Blackham A, Ruppanner L, Gaze B, Ainsworth S, Churchill B, Acosta Rueda L and Patrick C, ‘Caring and workplace gender equality in the Public Sector in Victoria: Final Project Report’, University of Melbourne, 2023.
Updated