Europe’s Child-Friendly Culture Shines, Urging Thailand to Reimagine Family Policy
A growing wave of research and personal accounts highlights a striking contrast: many European countries embed children and families across daily life, while the United States often treats family needs as secondary. The gap affects childhood development, public health, and social cohesion, beyond mere parental convenience.
This discussion intensified after a viral Salon essay by a Philadelphia mother who traveled through Berlin, London, and Dublin, illustrating how European daily life supports families compared with the U.S. Her reflections align with social science findings and long-standing policy comparisons.