What kinds of holidays are selebrated in the uk?


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How is the UK doing?


In comparison with economically and socially comparable countries this data suggests that, on average, we are doing ok.

  • We are reportedly more satisfied with our lives than the OECD average.

  • The average Brit is slightly happier than the average EU citizen.



  • 86% of us agreed or strongly agreed that what we do in life is worthwhile, above the EU-28 average of 78%.

  • When it comes to mental wellbeing; feeling calm, cheerful, active, rested and interested, we have been feeling better over the last few years, and score on a par with the EU-28 average.

An important aspect of wellbeing, both at the individual level, and at the community level, is the quality of our relationships. For the majority of people in the UK, it would seem like we are doing ok in this regard too. The vast majority of us, 93% said that if we were in trouble, we had a relative or friends to count on. This is higher than the OECD average of 89%.

15. What is the role of the men and the women in the British family?


. Gender equality in terms of who does the bulk of the chores and who is primarily responsible for looking after the children has made very little progress in terms of what happens in people’s homes. Men’s uptake of unpaid domestic work is slow, and women continue to feel that they are doing more than their fair share. Whether women’s ‘double shift’ – both doing a paid job and the bulk of family care and housework chores – is sustainable is an important question for the future. Gender inequalities in the home undoubtedly make it difficult to achieve gender equality in the workplace. This is a cause for public concern. The state has an important role to play in reducing work-family conflict for both men and women. However, the public is likely to be cautious about specific policy changes because opinions are shaped by existing practices and constraints. We have seen, for example, that there is almost zero support for any gender role reversal when it comes to preferences for juggling work and family responsibilities. However there is a non-trivial minority who support a more equitable divide of parental leave between mothers and fathers. The literature depicts two extremes when discussing trends in gender equality. On the one hand we have suggestions that there is a ‘rising tide’ of support for gender equality (Ingelhart and Norris, 2003); on the other hand we are told that there has been an ‘incomplete revolution’ (Esping-Andersen, 2009). On balance, the findings from this chapter are more equivocal. The British public perceives a mismatch between depictions of gender-neutral ‘adult worker’ families and the practical realities of the gender division of paid and unpaid labour, especially when children are young. Is the gender role revolution stalled? Or are we seeing what can be called a ‘structural lag’ – whereby men and societal institutions (parental leave, childcare, employment, and so on) have to catch up with the realities of changing families and women’s new roles? Only time will tell.
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