abstract: 'Purpose This research article explores several questions about assessing the impacts of fathers'' parental leave take up and gender equality. We ask: How does the conceptual and contextual specificity of care and equality shape what we focus on, and how, when we study parental leave policies and their impacts? What and how are we measuring? Design/methodology/approach The article is based on a longitudinal qualitative research study on families with fathers who had taken parental leave in two Canadian provinces (Ontario and Quebec), which included interviews with 26 couples in the first stage (25 mother/father couples and one father/father couple) and with nine couples a decade later. Guided by Margaret Somers'' historical sociology of concept formation, we explore the concepts of care and equality (and their histories, networks, and narratives) and how they are taken up in parental leave research. We also draw on insights from three feminist scholars who have made major contributions to theoretical intersections between care, work, equality, social protection policies, and care deficits: Nancy Fraser, Joan Williams, and Martha Fineman. Findings The relationship between fathers'' leave-taking and gender equality impacts is a complex, non-linear entanglement shaped by the specificities of state and employment policies and by how these structure parental eligibility for leave benefits, financial dimensions of leave-taking (including wage replacement rates for benefits), childcare possibilities/limitations and related financial dimensions for families, masculine work norms in workplaces, and intersections of gender and social class. Overall, we found that maximizing both parental leave time and family income in order to sustain good care for their children (through paid and unpaid leave time, followed by limited and expensive childcare services) was articulated as a more immediate concern to parents than were issues of gender equality. Our research supports the need to draw closer connections between parental leave, childcare, and workplace policies to better understand how these all shape parental leave decisions and practices and possible gender equality outcomes. Originality/value We call for a move toward thinking about care, not as care time, but as responsibilities, which can be partly assessed through the stories people tell about how they negotiate and navigate care, domestic work, and paid work responsibilities in specific contexts and conditions across time. We also advocate for gender equality concepts that attend to how families navigate restrictive parental leave and childcare policies and how broader socio-economic inequalities arise partly from state policies underpinned by a concept of liberal autonomous subjects rather than relational subjects who face moments of vulnerability and inter-dependence across the life course.' affiliation: 'Doucet, A (Corresponding Author), Brock Univ, Dept Sociol, St Catharines, ON, Canada. Doucet, Andrea, Brock Univ, Dept Sociol, St Catharines, ON, Canada. McKay, Lindsey, Thompson Rivers Univ, Dept Sociol \& Anthropol, Kamloops, BC, Canada.' author: Doucet, Andrea and McKay, Lindsey author-email: adoucet@brocku.ca author_list: - family: Doucet given: Andrea - family: McKay given: Lindsey da: '2023-09-28' doi: 10.1108/IJSSP-04-2019-0086 earlyaccessdate: MAR 2020 eissn: 1758-6720 files: [] issn: 0144-333X journal: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY AND SOCIAL POLICY keywords: 'Canada; Gender equality; Parental leave; Policy impacts; Fathering; Historical sociology of concept formation' keywords-plus: 'CHILD-CARE; PATERNITY LEAVE; INVOLVEMENT; RESPONSIBILITIES; DIVISION; POLICIES; CONTEXT; SWEDEN' language: English month: JUN 8 number: 5-6, SI number-of-cited-references: '77' orcid-numbers: Doucet, Andrea/0000-0002-6000-9029 pages: 441-463 papis_id: 6a118806d72839e7681827abbcf905c9 ref: Doucet2020fatheringparental researcherid-numbers: 'Doucet, Andrea/ABE-7531-2020 ' times-cited: '17' title: 'Fathering, parental leave, impacts, and gender equality: what/how are we measuring?' type: Article unique-id: WOS:000524809900001 usage-count-last-180-days: '3' usage-count-since-2013: '24' volume: '40' web-of-science-categories: Sociology year: '2020'