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''All In: How Our Work-First Culture Fails Dads, Families, and Businesses—And How We Can Fix It Together'' is a 2015 book by journalist
Josh Levs Joshua Levs, commonly known as Josh Levs, is an American broadcast journalist. Born in Albany, New York, he reports for the CNN news television network. Biography Levs was raised in a Conservative Jewish family in Albany, New York and received ...
urging changes in employment practices, government policy, and societal attitudes concerning fathers and family care.


Background

When Levs, a CNN journalist, requested extended paid parental leave from CNN’s parent company Time Warner in August 2013, he was denied anything more than the two weeks paid leave for biological fathers—much less than 10 weeks paid leave that were provided for women and for men who had babies through adoption or surrogacy. Levs used his two paid weeks, and additionally vacation and sick days as he cared for his three children and wife, who had developed severe preeclampsia. Levs filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) against Time Warner demanding equitable paid paternity leave, the claim essentially prevailing a year later. . Though Time Warner changed its family leave policies, the changes were not retroactive to benefit Levs himself.


Content

''Kirkus Reviews'' wrote that ''All In'' provides "well-documented and easy-to-comprehend data on why men need more paid time off to be with their newborn children." Levs' analysis was said to show how the workplace has not kept pace with the significant changes in "male-female dynamics at home" over the past 50 years, and that, in addition to his scrutiny and evaluation of paid paternity leave, Levs also considered issues relating to absentee fathers, lack of intimacy for new parents, and finding the mental and spiritual balance needed for parenting during times of stress. ''Publishers Weekly'' described ''All In'' as a "call for men to fight against the laws, policies, and stigmas preventing them from fully participating in their families’ lives," more specifically, discussing parental leave, the tax system, paid family leave, the "doofus dad" stereotype, fear of men as predators, the stigma against men taking time off work for family, and a plea for men and women to work together, as well as providing action plans for family-supportive work environments. '' The Daily Beast's'' Andy Hinds added that ''All In'' argues that the "pop culture image of dads as lazy and uninvolved" is both false and damaging, pigeonholing both men and women. ''All In'' characterizes the workplace as forcing men to place career before family, and penalizing them if they don't. The book urges that men be accurately portrayed and more strongly supported in their fatherhood roles, such as with federally mandated paternity leave, and flextime and
remote work Remote work, also called work from home (WFH), work from anywhere, telework, remote job, mobile work, and distance work is an employment arrangement in which employees do not commute to a central place of work, such as an office building, ware ...
opportunities. ''Business Lexington's'' Paul Sanders wrote that ''All In'' reads like "a series of thematically linked essays" in a broad-brush approach that attempts to touch many facets of the problem, noting the book's extensive fact-checking approach. The book is said to spotlight gender discrimination in an American workplace that trails much of the world on the issue, noting that in industry's "war for talent" companies can attract and retain employees by offering paid paternity leave. The title ''All In'' is a play on the title of Sheryl Sandberg’s 2013 women's empowerment book, '' Lean In.''See Levs was said to expand and detail Sandberg’s argument that advancing the American economy depends on changing workplace structures, not only for women but for men. '' Time's'' Charlotte Alter summarized the gist of ''All In'' as being that "men should lean in just as much as women—they should just do it in a different direction."


References

{{reflist, 2


External links


Author's website: JoshLevs.com
American non-fiction books Discrimination in the United States 2015 non-fiction books HarperOne books