An idiographic Approach to Measuring Subjective Well-Being

被引:0
作者
Kaine, Geoff [1 ]
Stronge, Dean [1 ]
机构
[1] Manaaki Whenua Landcare Res, Hamilton, New Zealand
关键词
Wellbeing; Judgement analysis; Measurement; Idiographic; Trade-offs; Non-compensatory; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; FRAMEWORK;
D O I
10.1007/s11482-024-10370-5
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
While aggregate, national measures of wellbeing may be useful for developing national policies and making international comparisons, they are less helpful when it comes to the more prosaic matter of developing policies at the project or programme level. This is because wellbeing is multi-dimensional and variable in terms of the relative importance of domains, the attributes and indicators used to evaluate domains, and the relative importance of those attributes and indicators. Consequently, people's preferences regarding the trade-offs that must be made between domains, and between attributes within domains, are exceptionally diverse. We use an idiographic approach, Judgement Analysis, to quantify people's preferences regarding trade-offs within, and between, well-being domains using green space, water quality, cultural identity, social connectedness. We show that Judgement Analysis has the potential at the programme or project scale to usefully quantify differences in the relative importance people place on well-being domains and to quantifying differences in the relative importance of the cues they use to evaluate well-being with respect to a domain. Our results make explicit the extensive diversity in people's perspectives on well-being that is often hidden in the popular nomothetic approaches to measuring well-being.
引用
收藏
页码:3253 / 3277
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Subjective Well-Being in Urban Adolescents of Color
    Vera, Elizabeth
    Gonzales, Rufus
    Conner, Wendy
    Caskey, Erin
    Mattera, Laurie-Ann
    Thakral, Charu
    Morgan, Melissa
    Bauer, Amber
    Clark, Stacy
    Bena, Kim
    Dick, Laura
    [J]. CULTURAL DIVERSITY & ETHNIC MINORITY PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 14 (03) : 224 - 233
  • [42] Illness Intrusiveness and Subjective Well-Being in Schizophrenia
    Bettazzoni, Monica
    Zipursky, Robert B.
    Friedland, Judith
    Devins, Gerald M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE, 2008, 196 (11) : 798 - 805
  • [43] The Subjective Well-Being of the Homeless, and Lessons for Happiness
    Robert Biswas-Diener
    Ed Diener
    [J]. Social Indicators Research, 2006, 76 : 185 - 205
  • [44] Exercise and subjective well-being in old adults
    Cruz, Maria H.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AGING AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, 2012, 20 : S42 - S42
  • [45] Does commuting matter to subjective well-being?
    Lorenz, Olga
    [J]. JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY, 2018, 66 : 180 - 199
  • [46] The subjective well-being of adults born preterm
    Winstanley, Alice
    Lamb, Michael E.
    Ellis-Davies, Kate
    Rentfrow, Peter Jason
    [J]. JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN PERSONALITY, 2015, 59 : 23 - 30
  • [47] Familial Reciprocity and Subjective Well-being in Ghana
    Tsai, Ming-Chang
    Dzorgbo, Dan-Bright S.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY, 2012, 74 (01) : 215 - 228
  • [48] School bullying, subjective well-being, and resilience
    Andreou, Eleni
    Roussi-Vergou, Christina
    Didaskalou, Eleni
    Skrzypiec, Grace
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGY IN THE SCHOOLS, 2020, 57 (08) : 1193 - 1207
  • [49] Hindi Translation and Validation of Scales for Subjective Well-being, Locus of Control and Spiritual Well-being
    Grover, Sandeep
    Dua, Devakshi
    [J]. INDIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE, 2021, 43 (06) : 508 - 515
  • [50] Holiday travel, staycations, and subjective well-being
    de Bloom, Jessica
    Nawijn, Jeroen
    Geurts, Sabine
    Kinnunen, Ulla
    Korpela, Kalevi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM, 2017, 25 (04) : 573 - 588