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Showing papers in "Social Indicators Research in 1988"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Happiness Measure (HM) as discussed by the authors has been used for well-being measurement for over 18 years and has shown good reliability, exceptional stability, and a record of convergent, construct, and discriminative validity unparalleled in the field.
Abstract: Eighteen years of research using the Happiness Measures (HM) is reviewed in relation to the general progress of well-being measurement efforts. The accumulated findings on this remarkably quick instrument, show good reliability, exceptional stability, and a record of convergent, construct, and discriminative validity unparalleled in the field. Because of this, the HM is offered as a potential touchstone of measurement consistency in a field which generally lacks it.

609 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it is concluded that society is more likely to flourish with happy citizens than with unhappy ones and that happiness buffers stress, thereby preserving health and lengthening life somewhat.
Abstract: The issue. Nineteenth century utilitarian philosophers considered happiness as the highest good (‘utility’ in their words) and claimed political priority for attempts to promote the greatest happiness for the greatest number. In reaction, many of their contemporaries cried out that happiness is not good at all, because it turns people into ‘contented cows’ and undermines social bonds. Modern psychologists, however, tend to suggest positive effects: sharper awareness, more activity, better social functioning and better health. Data. No empirical investigations have yet focussed on consequences of happiness. Nevertheless, indications can be found in various studies covering other matters. This paper gathers the available data. These data do not allow definite conclusions, but do suggest several small yet noteworthy effects. Enjoyment of life seems to broaden perception, to encourage active involvement and thereby to foster political participation. It facilitates social contacts: in particular contacts with spouse and children. Further, happiness buffers stress, thereby preserving health and lengthening life somewhat. There is no evidence of harmful effects. It is concluded that society is more likely to flourish with happy citizens than with unhappy ones.

309 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article reviewed literature on the structure of subjective well-being, and examined the support for a number of proposed wellbeing dimensions, including positive and negative affective dimensions, as well as a general second-order dimension.
Abstract: This paper reviews literature on the structure of subjective well-being, and examines the support for a number of proposed well-being dimensions. It is considered that a distinction between cognitive and affective dimensions is conceptually useful, but poorly researched. Clear support, however, is available for a distinction between positive and negative affective dimensions, as well as for a general second-order dimension of subjective well-being. Proposals for a distinction between inner and outer dimensions of well-being are considered promising but speculative at present. Although the intensity and frequency of affective experience are clearly distinct, it is considered that affect intensity should not be regarded as a dimension of well-being. Three issues related to the dimensionality of well-being, the time focus of assessment, attempts at cross-classification of dimensions, and research on the stability of well-being structure, are also discussed. Although considerable research into subjective well-being exists, the structure of well-being is not yet well established or researched.

243 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The indicators described in this article are measures of status equality (as compared to measure of status attainment), and status equality was operationalized by expressing the status attainment scores for women as a percentage of the scores for men.
Abstract: The indicators described in this paper are measures of status equality (as compared to measures of status attainment). Status equality was operationalized by expressing the status attainment scores for women as a percentage of the scores for men. Indicators of equality in the economic, political, and legal spheres of life were computed for each of the 50 U.S. states. The indicators were combined to create an overall Gender Equality Index and a subscale for each of the three spheres. Analyses of internal consistency reliability and construct validity are presented. Large state-to-state and regional differences were found for all three spheres. In respect to the overall Gender Equality Index the scores ranged from a low of 19 (i.e. 19% of what is needed for equality with men) to a high of only 60%.

110 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The human sense of relative superiority (SRS) as discussed by the authors suggests that almost all human beings explicitly believe that their own performance in major life roles is well above average, which is referred to as subjective well-being above the midpoint of scales.
Abstract: QOL research appears to show that in nearly all countries which have been studied almost all sections of the community rate their subjective well-being (SWB) above the mid-point of scales. This paper suggests a partial explanation of this puzzling finding. It is that almost all human beings explicitly believe that their own performance in major life roles is well above average. We label this the human sense of relative superiority (SRS). In the 1985 Australian Quality of Life survey (N = 584) respondents rated their performance in seven major roles on a 7 point scale running from “way above average” to “way below average”. The percentages rating themselves above average ranged from 85.9% for main job to 49.8% for main spare time activity. Percentages rating below average ranged from 1% for main job to 11.5% for keeping fit and healthy. The median respondent rated himself/herself above average in five of seven roles. Differences between men and women, young and old, higher and lower status people, were slight. The later sections of the paper are concerned with the adaptive mechanisms by which large majorities manage to feel SRS. Differential weighting of sub-roles in assessment of overall role performance and use of restricted reference groups are suggested as two such mechanisms. The concluding section discusses the benefits and costs of SRS. Benefits include enhanced self-esteem and SWB. Costs include failure to perceive one’s own poor performance and hence to take corrective action.

106 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on some of the complications that may arise from errors of measurement in quality of life (QOL) scales based on self-report and show that self-reported QOL appears particularly vulnerable to mood-of-the-day effects among younger females.
Abstract: This paper focuses on some of the complications that may arise from errors of measurement in quality of life (QOL) scales based on self-report. It is argued that systematic errors as well as random errors (specifically in the shape of mood-of-the-day effects) will tend to suppress, mask or “wash out” statistical associations between “objective”, sociologically relevant, indicators of well-being and self-reported quality of life. Results from a Norwegian sample of middle-aged and old participants in a health screening operation (N=610) are reported. The findings indicate that response acquiescence (“yea-saying”) may be a source of systematic error even in balanced QOL-scales, and that this bias may lead one to underestimate QOL among the well-educated and overestimate it among older respondents. Utilizing over-time data we are able to show that self-reported QOL appears particularly vulnerable to mood-of-the-day effects among younger females. Implications for sociological research on subjective well-being are pointed out.

83 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors evaluated the relationship between measures of psychological well-being and social desirability in three age groups: 21-40, 41-60, and 61-82 year-old samples.
Abstract: The present investigation evaluated the relationship between measures of psychological well-being and social desirability in three age groups: 21–40, 41–60, and 61–82 year-old samples. Data on 330 people, consisting of community and clinical groups, yielded high correlations between three measures of well-being (the MUNSH, the LSI-Z, and the PGC) and the Edwards Social Desirability Scale for all age groups, but only moderate ones between well-being scales and the Marlow-Crown Social Desirability Scale. Partial correlations between well-being measures and an external criterion of happiness, controlling for social desirability, failed to improve on the 0-order criterion/well-being relationship. Controlling for social desirability, therefore, does not enhance the construct validity of well-being scales in adult populations at any age. These results, combined with those on the factor structure of scale totals and on the discriminant validity of the well-being measures, suggest that the high 0-order correlations between measures of well-being and the Edwards scale are more readily attributed to content similarity between the Edwards scale and measures of well-being than to a social desirability response bias in well-being measures.

65 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a method to reduce the diverse elements that significantly affect the quality-of-life (QOL) of individuals and social groups to a single metric.
Abstract: Any attempt to construct an overall measure of the quality-of-life (“QOL”) of a community, population group, or larger society must inevitably confront the critical obstacle posed by the absence of a common numeraire. The diverse elements that significantly affect the “QOL” of individuals and social groups are each subject, at least in principle, to some form of measurement, but no satisfactory method has yet been devised whereby these different measurements could be reduced to a single metric.

59 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the environmental problems of Benin City, capital of Bendel State of Nigeria, and propose solutions to improve the quality of life in the city.
Abstract: Third World cities face many persistent planning problems. The problems persist partly because planning has not been sufficiently responsive to local peculiarities. This lack of responsiveness is in turn because of the gross scale at which problems are conceived and attacked. One of the persistent problems in all Nigerian cities is their poor environmental quality. This study, therefore, seeks to investigate the environmental problems of Benin City, capital of Bendel State of Nigeria. Six environmental dimensions are measured and analysed. A composite conceptual index of quality of life is derived from the six dimensions, and compared with an index of perceived quality for each area. The study adopts the neighbourhood as the unit in collecting and analysing data, and in proposing solutions. It is recommended that planning administration in Benin City must be decentralized, if it is to be more responsive to intra-city environmental eccentricities, and improve the quality of life.

55 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the province of Alberta in Canada, the Edmonton-Calgary corridor represents the centre while the rest of the province, especially Northern Alberta characterizes the periphery as discussed by the authors, usually, the centre is well-developed, and has a higher level of facilities and infrastructure, while shortages and a poorer infrastructure, sometimes bordering on marginality, characterize the periphery.
Abstract: Centre-periphery relationships have generally been a characteristic of every level of development regardless of the type of political economy. Usually, the centre is well-developed, and has a higher level of facilities and infrastructure, while shortages and a poorer infrastructure, sometimes bordering on marginality, characterize the periphery. In the province of Alberta in Canada, the Edmonton—Calgary corridor represents the centre while the rest of the province, especially Northern Alberta characterizes the periphery.

34 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated changes in quality of life of 400 cardiac patients and their wives during an extended period of physical and psychosocial recovery and found that subjective health perceptions, a sense of self-efficacy, and relatively stable socio-environmental conditions associated with the level of spouse intimacy and marital stress.
Abstract: In a national sample of some 400 cardiac patients and their wives, changes in quality of life were investigated during an extended period of physical and psychosocial recovery. Scores on the Bradburn Affect Balance Scale were found to be strongly correlated with Pearson coefficients in the vicinity of 0.7 over a five-year period, indicating a certain stability of subjective perceptions of well-being and ill-being. just as neuroticism and extraversion have been found to discriminate between ‘happy’ and ‘unhappy’ people in several studies, the stability of well-being in our study appeared to be influenced by subjective health perceptions, a sense of self-efficacy, and relatively stable socio-environmental conditions associated with the level of spouse intimacy and marital stress. Substantial health-related and interpersonal problems appeared to be the cause of an erosion of feelings of personal competence and, therefore, to be predictive of high negative affect and ill-being. In contrast, positive health perceptions and marital intimacy were directly related to a sense of well-being. Stable socio-environmental conditions and perceived self-efficacy are suggested as salient factors in causal models of the effect of life events on well-being.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article explored a lifestyle typology using personal projects methodology and found that three distinct lifestyle types were identified among a large community sample They were tentatively labelled as "pressured", "relaxed" and "wishful thinking" lifestyles.
Abstract: Lifestyle, currently a popular lay term but not an important construct within the social sciences, is examined briefly Two studies designed to explore a lifestyle typology using personal projects methodology are reported In the first study, three distinct lifestyle types were identified among a large community sample They were tentatively labelled “pressured”, “relaxed”, and “wishful thinking” lifestyles In the second stuty, these types were replicated for a university student group, with two types of a “relaxed” lifestyle being revealed

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the LISREL maximum-likelihood program was used to examine the relation between Bradburn's positive affect and negative affect scales for three age groups of adults, and it was found that unequal item loadings fit significantly better than equal items loadings, and the best fitting loadings for the elderly are significantly different from those of the non-elderly.
Abstract: Using the LISREL maximum-likelihood program, the relation between Bradburn's positive affect and negative affect scales is examined for three age groups of adults. It is found that (a) unequal item loadings fit significantly better than equal item loadings; (b) the best-fitting loadings for the elderly are significantly different from those of the non-elderly; (c) the positive and negative affect scales are substantially correlated and (d) correlations with related variables are stronger when positive and negative affect scales are formed by maximum-likelihood loadings rather than by unit loadings. Given the widespread use of Bradburn's scales, implications of these results for subjective well-being are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
J.P. Roos1
TL;DR: In this paper, happiness is seen in the context of the whole life situation, and happiness can be treated either as ephemeral, unstable, or as something inherent of given ways of life, dispositions towards life.
Abstract: Happiness can be treated either as ephemeral, unstable. unresearchable or as something inherent of given ways of life, dispositions towards life. Here, the latter position is taken, and happiness is seen in the context of the whole life situation. Also, happiness is taken to be socially determined and ruled by social norms: the concept of happiness barrier is proposed, i.e. a situation where people present themselves as happy and need to develop stategies for this purpose.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A largescale survey of 1209 Filipina contract workers (domestic servants) in Hong Kong included a five point scale measure of job satisfaction as mentioned in this paper, which was used to classify the original sample into dissatisfied and satisfied groups and was successful in 64% of cases.
Abstract: A largescale survey of 1209 (5%) Filipina contract workers (domestic servants) in Hong Kong included a five point scale measure of job satisfaction. In order to discover which variables were ‘most’ related to job satisfaction levels a logistic regression analysis was carried out. Salary, length of residence, the number of relatives in Hong Kong, the provision of a private room and the nationality of the employer were selected by the model as the most important factors. Using the above five variables, the logistic regression model was then used to classify the original sample into dissatisfied and satisfied groups and was successful in 64% of cases.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the Mokken method and accompanying MOKken test are used as a means for developing equivalent attitude scales for cross-national research on attitudes, and the results can be used to guide the development of Rasch and LISREL models.
Abstract: A fundamental methodological issue in cross-national research on attitudes is the comparability of the attitude measures across populations. We address this issue by presenting the Mokken method and accompanying Mokken test as a means for developing equivalent attitude scales. We apply these methods to an analysis of the responses to seven abortion items in the 1982 NORC GSS and West German ALLBUS combined files. We find that the seven items form a unidimensional scale in both countries and that four of these items constitute a scale that is robust across the two populations. We conclude by describing how such results can be used to guide the development of Rasch and LISREL models.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For example, this article found that the same factors which predict abortion attitudes among persons having polar positions on the subject also predict abortion attitude among the general population. But, they did not find that these factors were strong predictors of abortion attitudes as are individual's beliefs about premarital sex, divorce, and euthanasia.
Abstract: This paper updates and expands the study of abortion attitudes originally done by Blake and del Pinal (1980). Since 1978, the last year examined by those authors, the American public's approval of the legalization of abortion initially increased but then dropped to the lowest level ever recorded by the General Social Survey. Religion, as coded by Blake and del Pinal, and education continue to be strong predictors of abortion attitudes as are individual's beliefs about premarital sex, divorce, and euthanasia. A major finding of this study is that the same factors which predict abortion attitudes among persons having polar positions on the subject also predict abortion attitudes among the general population.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a comparison of Canadian and American university students on happiness and satisfaction as measured by the Satisfaction and Happiness Survey (Michalos, 1985) is presented, showing that American students had slightly higher means on both overall satisfaction and happiness with life as a whole than Canadian students.
Abstract: This paper presents a comparison of Canadian and American university students on happiness and satisfaction as measured by the Satisfaction and Happiness Survey (Michalos, 1985). For the American sample, the findings for other measures of satisfaction and happiness, as well as for hope as measured by the Hope Index (Staats and Stassen, 1986), are also reported. American students had slightly higher means on both overall satisfaction and happiness with life as a whole than the Canadian students. The greatest perceived gap for American students was between what one has now and expects to have in the future while for Canadian students it was between what one has and what one needs. Both Canadian and American students reported greatest satisfaction with health and lowest satisfaction with financial security and paid employment. For the American sample, of the other satisfaction, happiness, and hope measures, a global happiness measure had the highest correlation with both overall satisfaction (r=0.62, p<0.0001) and happiness with life as a whole (r=0.55, p<0.0001). Reasons for the observed differences between the two samples are suggested and future research directions are discussed.

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: For example, survey research results from Gallup Polls in 30 countries over the past decade suggest that most people are not optimists about their immediate future as mentioned in this paper, indicating that they are not optimistic about the future.
Abstract: Survey research results from Gallup Polls in 30 countries over the past decade suggest that most people are not optimists about their immediate future.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the subjective well-being of returning Zulu retirees was found to be influenced mainly by such factors as health, perceived financial security, social activity and participation, and positive sentiment towards retirement life.
Abstract: The quality of late life in technologically advanced societies has been well-researched. In contrast, very little systematic research has been conducted among the aged in less developed societies. An interesting case of retirement in a society in transition is that of returning Zulu contract workers. The apartheid laws of South Africa constrain migrant movements: contract workers typically spend their working lives in the urban-industrial milieu of the core economy and later return to a rural lifestyle in their areas of origin in the peripheral “homelands”. The retirement circumstances of 253 male return migrants in five rural areas of KwaZulu were assessed in an in-depth study. The subjective well-being of the Zulu retirees was found to be influenced mainly by such factors as health, perceived financial security, social activity and participation, and positive sentiment towards retirement life. The conclusion is drawn that migrant workers’ needs in retirement have a universal quality. This finding has social welfare policy implications in a society which is characterised by unequal distribution of privilege.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This brief paper describes variations in the nature and magnitude of the traditional inverse association between economic status and infant mortality and offers an explanation for the observed temporal changes that relates the influence of medical and infant health care advances to the prevailing overall economic situation.
Abstract: Data from a metropolitan aggregate comprising three Ohio cities for the years 1959–61, 1969–71 and 1979–81 reveal some noteworthy variations over time in the nature and magnitude of the traditional inverse association between economic status and infant mortality. This brief paper describes these variations and offers an explanation for the observed temporal changes that relates the influence of medical and infant health care advances to the prevailing overall economic situation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on racial differences and similarities in factors affecting levels of global perceived stress and found that socio-demographic characteristics as well as satisfactions with the major domains of life (such as self, standard of living, health, family life, and leisure) are predictors of global stress.
Abstract: Using data from a national probability sample of black and white females, this study focuses on racial differences and similarities in factors affecting levels of global perceived stress. Selected socio-demographic characteristics as well as satisfactions with the major domains of life — such as self, standard of living, health, family life, and leisure — are examined as predictors of global perceived stress. Generally, domain satisfactions are found to be stronger predictors of perceived stress than are socio-demographic characteristics. Moreover, no racial differences between black and white females are found when socio-demographic factors are controlled. However, a significant racial difference is encountered for one domain: satisfaction with leisure appears to be a stronger predictor of perceived stress for black females than it is for white females.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the 1983 general census of the population of the country to determine correlates of Israeli intra-urban residential mobility, data from the 1983 census were gathered from the 61 Israeli towns with at least 5000 inhabitants the majority of which are Jews.
Abstract: In order to determine correlates of Israeli intra-urban residential mobility, data from the 1983 general census of the population were gathered from the 61 Israeli towns with at least 5000 inhabitants the majority of which are Jews. Inhibiting and intensifying factors of mobility were identified. It was found that juvenile crime, percent of Asian/African inhabitants, percent female unemployment and mean family size were positively and significantly related to intra-urban mobility. On the other hand, quality of living, median education, mean gross income, uncrowded households and mean age were negatively and significantly related to residential mobility. The level of religiosity, population size, crowded households and percent general unemployment were not related to intra-urban migration. Comparisons of the relationships of these variables to both intra-urban migration and inmigration rates were also made drawing attention to ethnic and SES factors.

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: A measure of feminism is introduced, and a case is made for the acceptability of its levels of reliability, criterion-related, content, construct and discriminant-validity as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: A measure of feminism is introduced, and a case is made for the acceptability of its levels of reliability, criterion-related, content, construct and discriminant-validity. Feminism is shown to be related to such features of the quality of life as happiness and being a good person. Survey results are reported from a sample of 431 members of the Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women and 413 undergraduate women from the University of Guelph.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A five-factor model is developed and tested empirically using World Bank statistical data from 123 countries and two factors representing dimensions of country affluence and population density are found to explain 78 percent of the variations in the health status indicator.
Abstract: This paper examines available international data relevant to the World Health Organization model of health status. It explores the possibility of constructing useful measures of health status, health policy, social and economic status, and provision of health care based on these data. A five-factor model is developed and tested empirically using World Bank statistical data from 123 countries. Two factors representing dimensions of country affluence and population density are found to explain 78 percent of the variations in the health status indicator. The countries with health status indicator levels worse than those predicted by the model are predominantly third-world countries; a majority are African. Countries with health status indicator levels better than predicted are mainly in Asia, Latin America, and Europe. Some generally accepted causal relationships were not supported by the findings in this analysis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The SPES Indicators Tableau and its extensions and modifications are discussed in this article, where the advantages of time series regression analysis for social reporting as well as classifying social change are discussed.
Abstract: The paper in hand deals with the construction of the SPES Indicators Tableau and its extensions and modifications which are carried out by current work. Advantages of time series regression analysis for social reporting as well as classifying social change are discussed. The paper ends with a short prospect on the publication in preparation which shall continue the social reporting of the SPES Indicators Tableau.



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the role of objective or subjective variables in differentiating or integrating the ordained set of social groups and examined the methodological implications and with respect to QOL data on India.
Abstract: The properties of objective or subjective variables are commonly examined with reference to a set of mutually distinct but analogous social groups structured at a time point. The procedure fails to examine what is happening across the structured groups and therefore what is likely to be the role of the variables in differentiating or integrating the ordained set of social groups. A resolution of this issue is vital for the appraisal of a better quality of life because by definition it is always an ongoing phenomenon. The issue is examined with reference to its methodological implications and with respect to QOL data on India.