Anthony O'Donnell is Senior Lecturer in Law at La Trobe University, Melbourne.
It is often thought that people are either employed or unemployed. Inventing Unemployment helps to unpack why and how a rigid divide between the two categories is not particularly helpful in understanding either one ... Inventing Unemployment is an important and compelling book which furthers understandings of the employment-welfare nexus. -- Gaby Ramia, University of Sydney, Australia * Journal of Industrial Relations * [A] meticulously researched and detailed examination of Australian unemployment law, administration and policy settings over the last century ... Social policy researchers, historians, public policy scholars and practitioners will find much value in the thought-provoking analysis offered by O'Donnell. -- Greg Marston, University of Queensland, Australia * Journal of Social Security Law * This is an important book both for specialists in labour law and welfare policy, but also for labour historians ... The book's strength is not simply its lucid explication of the evolution of law and policy relating to unemployment, but its secure grounding in historical context. -- Janet McCalman, University of Melbourne * Labour History *