Win-win: a progressive approach to maternity & paternity rights for professional athletes

Many employers consider family-friendly benefits, such as paid parental leave or child-care, to be a cornerstone of recruitment and retention. For example, Diageo (the UK beverage company) recently introduced a new global policy offering female employees a minimum of 26 weeks of fully paid maternity leave.[1] By contrast, sporting bodies are, in the authors’ experience, generally lagging behind in creating robust family-friendly policies, leaving them out of step with modern attitudes towards athletes’ rights, and potentially exposing them to legal risks for failing to meet even minimum statutory requirements.
Drawing on examples from around the world, this article examines current approaches towards maternity and paternity rights for athletes. It concludes that, on the whole, far more needs to be done to not only meet basic expectations, but also plan for the specific difficulties pregnancy and child-care can present for an athlete’s career.
Specifically, it looks at:
- Greater support for maternity leave/pay;
- Rethinking attitudes towards sponsorship/benefits;
- Assistance on return to work;
- Paternity rights;
- Tips for negotiating a progressive maternity/paternity policy.
Please note that this article does not explore the issue of employment status of athletes and the distinction between the benefits afforded to workers, employees and funded athletes. For an in depth discussion of this issue, please see this LawInSport article.[2] While minimum standards required under law vary by categorisation (and jurisdiction), the focus here is rather on identifying the issues that athletes are facing and discussing how they can be dealt with in a fitting manner.
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- Tags: Athlete Welfare | Athletics | Australia | Baseball | Employment | Employment Rights Act 1996 | Equality | Football | Football Federation Australia | Olympics | Professional Footballers Australia | Sponsorship | Tennis | The FA | Tokyo 2021 | United Kingdom (UK) | US Womens National Soccer Team | USA | U_S Tennis Association | Womens National Basketball Association (WNBA) | Womens Tennis Association (WTA)
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Written by
Jonathan Rennie
Jonathan is a partner at LEVEL. He has over 20 years’ experience as an employment lawyer with a particular expertise in contentious matters. He is dual qualified in Scotland and England and Wales and is recognised as an accredited specialist in employment law by the Law Society of Scotland.
Jonathan has significant corporate experience having qualified as a Chartered Secretary and worked in house for FTSE 100 companies.
He also chairs judicial disciplinary panels for both the English Football Association (general and anti-discrimination panel) and the Scottish Rugby Union as well as working with sports organisations and governing bodies on employment matters including player and manager disputes and discrimination investigations.
He is appointed to Sport Resolutions legal arbitration panel and in 2023 was appointed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport as a legal arbitrator on both the football and general sports panel. Jonathan is also a trustee and director of Street League, the sports employability charity for young people.
Nicky Beach
He has a keen interest in sport and has instructed and competed in various martial arts. Nicky trained for years in Krav Maga hand to hand combat, under the International Krav Maga Federation (IKMF) and Krav Maga Maor, as well as under instructors trained in unarmed combat in the U.K. armed forces and Israeli Defence Forces. He is a blue belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, having also medalled in the sport, has fought in a Mixed Martial Arts fight and has competed in Freestyle Wrestling. The latter he became involved in after successfully gaining a place on SportScotland’s Gold4Glasgow athlete’s programme. He is also a former Policy Director of the Scottish Wrestling Association (SWA).