Changing Times: Work and Leisure in Postindustrial Society

Oxford University Press UK (2000)
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Abstract

'The most comprehensive and accessibly written account of how people use time across European and North American countries... this book must be read by anyone with specialized interest in time use and socio-economic organisation. The book has a wide application. It is well crafted, tackling difficult and contentious, yet crucial, debates in contemporary society with clarity and precision. Regardless of whether you agree with its prognosis, analysis and theoretical reasoning, this is a thought provoking critique of socio-economic and temporal organisation.' -British Journal of Sociology 'The book will be valued particularly for its careful explanations of how time budget data can be analysed so as to make comparisons between countries and reveal trends over time.' -Sociology 'The book is entirely accessible to the general reader and many of the key ideas are graphically illustrated.' -Annals of Leisure ResearchIs there a 'speed-up' of daily life? Have the best-off members of developed societies lost their leisure? Have women won their jobs but kept their housework? Changing Times seeks to answer these and similar questions, putting together, for the first time, evidence of changing time-use patterns drawn from forty large-scale surveys, from twenty countries in Western Europe, North America, and Australia, covering the last third of the twentieth century.

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