%0 Journal Article %T Enforced leisure: Time use and its well %A Jiri Zuzanek %A Margo Hilbrecht %J Time & Society %@ 1461-7463 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/0961463X16678252 %X The article examines well-being and social implications of ¡°enforced leisure¡± resulting from unemployment and underemployment. The first part of the article reviews statistical and research evidence about social and well-being implications of unemployment and underemployment in the context of ¡°technological unemployment¡± and globalization. The second part examines well-being implications of enforced leisure (due to being unemployed or working part time because the respondent ¡°could not find a full-time job¡±) based on time use and well-being data collected as part of 2005, 2008, 2009, and 2010 Canadian General Social Surveys. Indicators used in the analyses of social and well-being correlates of ¡°enforced leisure¡± include respondents¡¯ time use, levels of perceived happiness, life satisfaction, satisfaction with work¨Cfamily balance, satisfaction with the use of time, self-assessed health, perceived stress, and indices of social integration such as sense of belonging to the community, trusting people, or exposure to socially destabilizing behavior %K Enforced leisure %K unemployment %K underemployment %K time use %K well-being %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0961463X16678252