Prolonged unemployment is associated with control loss and personal as well as social disengagement

  • Wiktor Soral
  • , Marcin Bukowski
  • , Michał Bilewicz
  • , Aleksandra Cichocka
  • , Karol Lewczuk
  • , Marta Marchlewska
  • , Aleksandra Rabinovitch
  • , Anna Rędzio
  • , Magdalena Skrodzka
  • , Mirosław Kofta

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective and Background: The need for control is a fundamental human motivation, that when deprived can lead to broad and substantial changes in human behavior. We aimed to assess the consequences of control deprivation in a real-life situation that poses a severe threat to personal control: a prolonged unemployment. Method: Using a sample N = 1055 of unemployed (n = 748) versus working (n = 307) individuals, we examined predictions derived from two models of reactions to control deprivation: control-regaining and disengagement/withdrawal. Results and Conclusions: We found that length unemployment is correlated with a psychological state strongly interfering with psychological as well as social functioning. While control-regaining models of responding to lack of control have received virtually no support from our findings, our results provide evidence that long-term unemployed individuals are more disengaged than working individuals. They are more apathetic, less likely to engage in control-regaining efforts and in active forms of construing one's own future.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1704-1725
Number of pages22
JournalJournal of Personality
Volume92
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • control deprivation
  • disengagement
  • helplessness
  • unemployment

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