Parenthood is an important milestone in a person’s life. Scholars have long investigated the effects of parenthood on participation in the labor market (Kil, Neels, Wood, & de Valk, 2018; Schober, 2013), income inequality (Angelov, Johansson, & Lindahl, 2016; Cooke, 2014), leisure time (Claxton & Perry-Jenkins, 2008; Kamp Dush, Yavorsky, & Schoppe-Sullivan, 2018), and life satisfaction (Pollmann-Schult, 2014; Umberson, Pudrovska, & Reczek, 2010). In recent years, there is also a growing body of research on political consequences of parenthood (Banducci, Elder, Greene, & Stevens, 2016; Bhatti, Hansen, Naurin, Stolle, & Wass, 2019; Costa, Greenlee, Nteta, Rhodes, & Sharrow, 2019; Elder & Greene, 2006; Elder & Greene, 2012; Greenlee 2010; Greenlee, 2014; Greenlee, Nteta, Rhodes, & Sharrow, 2018; O’Neill & Gidengil, 2017). Parenthood is widely considered as a marker of the individual’s diminished availability for protesting and, in particular, high-risk activism (Beyerlein & Hipp, 2006; McAdam, 1986). The bulk of quantitative analysis shows that parenthood is negatively associated with protest behavior (Espinal & Zhao, 2015; Rüdig & Karyotis, 2014; Schlozman, Burns, Verba, & Donahue, 1995). Some research, however, finds that parenthood stimulates civic activism (Fabian & Korolczuk, 2017; Wiltfang & McAdam, 1991). In Latin America, for example, motherhood served as a catalyst for women’s mobilization against the ruling elite (Bouvard, 1994; Fabj, 1993).