In this 1985 book, Peter Kelvin and Joanna Jarrett examine the effects
of unemployment identified by research conducted since the 1930s and
consider the implications of these effects on both personal
relationships and the public treatment of the unemployed. The book
brings together a wide variety of material - mainly psychological, but
also economic, sociological and, in particular, historical. This diverse
material is integrated in terms of a small number of fundamental
psychological concepts and five basic and related questions: how does
unemployment affect the way in which the unemployed individual sees
himself; how does it affect the way he sees others; how does he think
others see him; how do others actually see him; and how does any of this
affect how the individual behaves and how she/he is treated?