@article{Spitzer_54_31, author = {Spitzer, Sonja and Vignoli, Daniele and Schmidt, Eva-Maria and Kaldager Hart, Rannveig and Vargha, Lili and Greulich, Angela and Brini, Elisa and Bártová, Alžběta and Romero Balsas, Pedro and Reiter, Claudia and Kurowska, Anna and Lemoine, Adèle and Song, Zhanxiong and Herlitz, Agneta and Dančíková, Zuzana and Galdauskaitė, Dovilė and González, Libertad and Hatzivarnava-Kazassi, Evi and Honkaniemi, Helena and Juárez, Sol Pía and Lykke Kristiansen, Ida and Pall, Katre and Pertold-Gebicka, Barbara and Rakar, Tatjana and Räsänen, Tapio and Rentzou, Konstantina and Thil, Laurène and Tuda, Dora and Wagner, Sander and Wrohlich, Katharina}, title={{The European Parenting Leave Policies (EPLP) dataset: Leave duration entitlements for 21 countries from 1970 to 2024}}, journal = {Demographic Research}, volume = {54}, number = {31}, pages = {987--1008}, doi = {10.4054/DemRes.2026.54.31}, year = {2026}, abstract = {Background: Parenting leave policies shape how caregiving and paid work can be reconciled around the time of childbirth. They have important implications for fertility, employment, and gender equality. Still, there are limited quantitative cross-country data capturing long-term policy changes that impact how long parents can temporarily be away from work to care for their children, and how leave can be shared between them. Objective: The European Parenting Leave Policies (EPLP) Dataset provides harmonised regulations on maternity, co-parent, paid parental, and job-protected leave across 21 European countries from 1970 to 2024. It focuses on policies that shape how long birth mothers and their co-parents can take leave. Methods: Statutory leave entitlements were compiled from national legal sources, official government publications, and secondary literature. We followed a consistent set of data collection rules to enable comparison across countries and over time. Because the dataset focuses on time away from the job, it considers only rights for employed parents. It includes 33 variables and also documents country-specific reform timelines. Contribution: The EPLP Dataset fills a gap in existing data sources by providing quantitative data across 55 years on policies that shape how long parents stay at home around birth and how leave is shared between them. In addition to leave duration and benefits, it covers recent policy instruments such as incentives for parents to share leave, and timing and flexibility of leave use. The dataset enables cross-national comparisons and the analysis of changes over time, and can be used to study the effects of policy reforms. }, URL = {https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol54/31/}, eprint = {https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol54/31/54-31.pdf} }