Unemployment has a strong negative effect on subjective wellbeing, but the effect varies across groups. Using an event study approach, we explore the sources of heterogeneity in the effect of the transition into unemployment on life satisfaction, focusing on work identity and gender role attitudes. All experience a loss of life satisfaction when they become unemployed but we find greater heterogeneity of experience among men: the losses in life satisfaction are greater if they hold egalitarian rather than traditional gender role attitudes, and if they have strong rather than weak work identity. Among women, those holding traditional gender role attitudes experience larger losses. We discuss possible reasons for these results
Previous research has shown that the unemployed has lower life satisfaction than the employed but th...
We provide an up-to-date quantitative synthesis of the evidence on the effect of unemployment on wel...
While long-lasting declines in life satisfaction following unemployment have been well documented, e...
Unemployment has a strong negative effect on subjective wellbeing, but the effect varies across grou...
Unemployment has a strong negative effect on subjective wellbeing, but the effect varies across grou...
We use the differences between life satisfaction and emotional well-being of employed and unemployed...
Licensed under Creative Commons: AttributionNonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-...
According to set-point theories of subjective well-being, people react to events but then return to ...
Transitions in and out of work are common experiences with major repercussions for people’s lives. T...
Drawingupon recent psychological literature, we examine the effect of employment statuses pre- and p...
Transitions in and out of work are common experiences with major repercussions for people’s lives. T...
Using a nationally-representative longitudinal data of the British people, this paper explores how d...
Using a nationally representative longitudinal dataset of the British people, this paper explores ho...
Using a nationally representative longitudinal dataset of the British people, this paper explores ho...
Using Sullivan and Arthur\u27s (Sullivan & Arthur, 2006) refinement of the boundaryless career conce...
Previous research has shown that the unemployed has lower life satisfaction than the employed but th...
We provide an up-to-date quantitative synthesis of the evidence on the effect of unemployment on wel...
While long-lasting declines in life satisfaction following unemployment have been well documented, e...
Unemployment has a strong negative effect on subjective wellbeing, but the effect varies across grou...
Unemployment has a strong negative effect on subjective wellbeing, but the effect varies across grou...
We use the differences between life satisfaction and emotional well-being of employed and unemployed...
Licensed under Creative Commons: AttributionNonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-...
According to set-point theories of subjective well-being, people react to events but then return to ...
Transitions in and out of work are common experiences with major repercussions for people’s lives. T...
Drawingupon recent psychological literature, we examine the effect of employment statuses pre- and p...
Transitions in and out of work are common experiences with major repercussions for people’s lives. T...
Using a nationally-representative longitudinal data of the British people, this paper explores how d...
Using a nationally representative longitudinal dataset of the British people, this paper explores ho...
Using a nationally representative longitudinal dataset of the British people, this paper explores ho...
Using Sullivan and Arthur\u27s (Sullivan & Arthur, 2006) refinement of the boundaryless career conce...
Previous research has shown that the unemployed has lower life satisfaction than the employed but th...
We provide an up-to-date quantitative synthesis of the evidence on the effect of unemployment on wel...
While long-lasting declines in life satisfaction following unemployment have been well documented, e...