Title: The Wellbebe Project
1The Wellbebe Project
- Présentation at the séminar
- Redefining Prosperity
- IRES-UCL
- Louvain-La-Neuve
- 12/02/2008
- Paul-Marie Boulanger
-
- Institut
pour un - Développement Durable
2Organisation The network
- 1 Institut pour un développement durable (IDD)
(coordinator) 34 M/Months financed - 2 Centre dEtude du Développement Durable
(CEDD/IGEAT)- ULB 32 M/Months financed - 3 Hoger instituut voor de Arbeid (HIVA) KUL 32
M/Months financed - TOTAL 98 M/Months
3The WELLBEBE project objectives
- Working out a index of well-being in Belgium
- Usable in designing and assessing sustainable
development policies - Theory based (no measurement without theory)
- Subject to the test of public reasoning
4The WELLBEBE project methods (1)?
- Literature analysis theoretical and empirical
- Focus groups on dimensions, constituents and
determinants of well-being - Q-Methodology in search for communalities (and
weights) in conceptions of W-B - Data collection, scoreboard and well-being index
construction (normalisation and aggregation)?
5The WELLBEBE project methods (2)?
- Sample survey and multi-variate statistical
analysis in order to obtain additional
information on - Relations between conception of the good life,
objective conditions and subjective satisfaction - Statistically significant weights for the index
- Causalmapping for simulating and analysing the
possible impacts of likely SD policies on
well-being
6Time schedule work packages (2007-2010)?
- 2007-2008
- WP1 Theories and measures of well-being the
state of the art - WP2 Social discourses on well-being report form
focus groups and Q-Sortings - WP3 A blueprint for the index of well-being
- WP7.1. First workshop on intermediary results
- 2009-2010
- WP4 Sample survey design, conduct and analysis
- WP5 Building and testing the index
- WP6 Implications for and simulations of
sustainable development policies - WP7.2 Final workshop
7Sustainable development and well-being
- The project is funded by the Belgian Science
Policy as part of the Science for Sustainable
Development Program - Sustainable development as sustainable well-being
gt - Maximisation of well-being for all
(intragenerational equity at the global level) - At the least environmental cost
- (intergenerational equity requirement)?
-
- gt SD WB/EF
- Indicator Well-being/Environmental load
8Index construction
Concept
Conceptual analysis
Dimensions
Variables identification selection
Measurements
Indicators
Normalisation
Weighting
Aggregation
INDEX
9Example Human Development Index
Human Development
Education
Income
Health
Adults literacy rate 0.67
Life expectancy at birth
GDP/head
Children enrolment 0.33
Normalisation
Normalisation
S / 3HDI
10Well-being conceptions, determinants and
indicators
CAPABILITY
OUTCOMES
11Well-being conceptions
- Subjective (happiness)
- Affects
- Evaluations
- Objective lists ? What underpinnings
- Needs satisfaction
- Capability-Functionings (?)
- Mixed
- Capability-Functionings (?)
- QoL (Cummings)
- .
12Subjective well-being (SWB)
- Affective account
- SWB S (Positive or pleasant feelings) S
(Negative or unpleasant feelings) - Cognitive (evaluative) account
- SWB S (Positive or pleasant evaluations) S
(Negative or unpleasant evaluations) - gt Often a mix of both
13SWB affective account (1)
Example Positive and Negative Affects Schedule
(PANAS-X)
14SWB evaluative account
- Satisfaction with life scale (SWLS)
- In most way, my life is close to my ideal.
- The conditions of my life are excellent.
- I am satisfied with my life.
- So far, I have gotten the important things I
want in life. - If I could live my life over, I would change
almost nothing. - Personal Well-Being Index (PWI) How
satisfied are you with. - Your standard of living?
- Your health?
- What you are achieving in life?
- Your personal relationships?
- How safe you feel?
- Feeling part of your community?
- Your future security?
- How satisfied are you with your spirituality or
religion? a recent (November 2006) addition.
15SWB affective account (2) The Day
Reconstruction Method (Kahneman)
16Psychological Well-Being dimensions (C. Ryff)
- Autonomy being able to follow ones own
convictions. - Personal growth having a sense of continued
development and self-realisation - Self-acceptance having a positive attitude
towards oneself and ones past life - Purpose in life having goals and objectives that
give life meaning - Environmental mastery being able to manage
complex demands of daily life - Positive relation with others possessing caring
and trusting ties with others
17The SWB paradox
18Problems with SWB
- Framing (social comparison, aspiration level,
changes) - Adaptive preferences (habituation, coping..)
- Mis-assessment
- Causes ?
- Normative implications (helping only the un-happy
? Not helping the happy ?)
19Objective vs subjective assessments
- Objective quality of life assessments are only
objective in the sense that they are made on the
basis of inter-subjectively observable, material
facts about a person weighted by some form of
socially shared evaluation of how these facts
impact upon that person quality of life
(Morreim, 1986)? - Objective well-being is a normative concept it
must be stressed that objective measures of
well-being always reflect a set of valuesWe only
measure what is proposed as a value The question
is how well-argued and/or widely accepted those
values are. (Gasper, 2004)
20OWB conceptions (1) the BNA approach
- W-B
- satisfaction of fundamental human needs on a
secure basis - gt security of access to the (socially defined)
good-enough level of the (socially defined)
appropriate satisfiers - for every material, psychological and social
need.
21The language of needs
- Dispositional need a need one has simply by
virtue of being what one is (example water,
air)?gt biological, psychological and social
identity - Occurrent need a need one has by being in a
state of lack (needing water when being
dehydrated)? - Satisfier object of the need
22Needs in ordinary language
- Basic human needs ( Food is a basic human
need ) dispositional need? - A lack of basic human needs ( These people are
starving )? occurrence need - A satisfier( These people need food relief ).
23The BNA in practice (Braybrooke)
- Identifying needs
- Identifying satisfiers
- Measuring levels of provisions of satisfiers in
the population - Defining minimum thresholds of satisfaction
- Comparing actual levels of provision and
thresholds
24Identifying needs (1) Maslow
25Identifying needs (2) ?
- Kasser ( The High Price of Materialism )
- Safety
- Security
- Sustenance
- Competence
- Efficacy
- Self-esteem
- Connectedness
- Autonomy
- Authenticity
26Identifying needs (3) ?
- Max-Neef
- Subsistence
- Protection
- Affection
- Understanding
- Participation
- Idleness
- Creation
- Identity
- Freedom
27Development in a BNA perspective
- population above the minimum level of provision
(good enough threshold) for all and every need - Level of the good enough threshold
- Optimal diversity in available satisfiers
(because of diversity of talents and preferences)
freedom as fundamental human need (Connection
with Sens capability)
28Sources for a BNA approach
- Psychology positive psychology (Ryan Deci, C.
Ryff, Kasser, Bandura, Csikszentmihalyi), - Anthropology Malinowski, Colby
- Development economics Stewart, Streeten,
Max-Neef, Gasper - Heterodox economics humanistic (Lutz Lux),
Post-Keynesian, evolutionary - Moral and political philosophy Wiggins,
Braybrooke, Reader, Hamilton - Neo-darwinian evolutionary theory (Bio-cultural
evolution) well-being as adaptive fitness
(Corning)
29The Capability-functioning approach
30Sens conception of quality of life
31Functionings
- The well-being of a person can be seen in terms
of the quality (the well-ness, as it were) of
the persons being. Living may be seen as
consisting of a set of interrelated
functionings, consisting of beings and doings.
The relevant functionings can vary from such
elementary things as being adequately nourished,
being in good health, avoiding escapable
morbidity and premature mortality, etc. to more
complex achievements such as being happy, having
self-respect, taking part in the life of the
community, and son on. The claim is that
functionings are constitutive of a persons
being, and an evaluation of well-being has to
take the form of an assessment of these
constituent elements. - (Sen 1992, p.38).
32Well-being and agency
A persons agency achievement refer to the
realization of goals and values she has reasons
to pursue, whether or not they are connected with
their own well-being. A person as an agent need
not be guided only by her own well-being, and
agency achievements refer to the persons success
in the pursuit of the totality of her considered
goals and objectives. (p.56)
33Capability set
Closely related to the notion of functionings
is that of the capability to function. It
represents the various combinations of
functionings (beings and doings) that the person
can achieve. Capability, is thus, a set of
vectors of functionings, reflecting the persons
freedom to lead one type of life or another.the
capability set in the functioning space
reflects the persons freedom to choose from
possible livings (Sen, 1992, p.40)?
34Capabilties or functionings ? In brief.
- Emphasis on functionings individual achieved
well-being - Emphasis on capabilities social quality
(opportunities)? - Distinction not always clear fasting as
functioning is not just starving it is choosing
to starve when one does have other options
(p.52).
35The CA in practice main problems
- Choice between functionings and capabilities
- What about agency ?
- Selection of relevant capabilities (or
functionings)? - If capabilities how to measure ?
36What capabilities or functionings ?
37BNA vs CA
- Matter of justice
- BNA outcome-oriented (satisfaction of needs)
including agency needs (Hamilton) or autonomy
(Ryan Deci) - CA opportunities-oriented (capabilities to
function) OR both (functionings capabilities)? - Maxim of justice ?
- BNA sufficentarian prioritarian
- CA ? Equalitarian ?
- Satiation ?