Fr. 30.50

Happiness Explained - What Human Flourishing Is and What We Can Do to Promote It

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

What is human happiness and how can we promote it?

These questions are central to human existence and Happiness Explained draws on scientific research from economics, psychology, and philosophy, as well as a range of other disciplines, to outline a new paradigm in which human flourishing plays a central role in the assessment of national and global progress. It shows why the traditional national income approach is limited as a measure of human wellbeing and demonstrates how the contributors to happiness, wellbeing, and quality of life can be measured and understood across the human life course. Discussing wide-ranging aspects, from parenting, decent employment, friendship, education, and health in old age, through to money, autonomy, and fairness, as well as personal strategies and governmental polices used in the pursuit of happiness, it offers a science-based understanding of human flourishing.

Written by an economist involved in helping governmental organisations move 'beyond GDP', Happiness Explained shows how a wide range of factors that contribute to better and happier lives and how, together, they provide a new blueprint for the assessment of progress in terms of personal wellbeing.

List of contents

  • 1: The Need to Go Beyond GDP

  • 2: Human Flourishing

  • 3: The Wellbeing Space - What it is and How we are Doing?

  • 4: Quality of Life in Childhood and Older Age

  • 5: The Economics of Happiness and Wellbeing

  • 6: Psychological Motivation, Interactions, and Strategies

  • 7: Fairness and Justice

  • 8: International and Policy Perspectives

  • 9: Progress as Human Development

About the author

Paul Anand is an economist involved in helping governmental organizations move beyond GDP. He has held posts at Oxford University where he obtained his doctorate on the foundations of rational choice. He has written extensively on quality of life issues through research funded by the Leverhulme Trust and the Arts and Humanities Research Board. He has contributed to a number of journal boards including the Journal of Economic Psychology and been a member of research commissioning panels for the ESRC and NHS. He also has long standing interests in the utilization of research having worked closely for a number of years with the Statistics Directorate of the OECD and the UK Office of National Statistics Task force. He is a professor of Economics Decision Sciences and Philosophy at the Open University and a research associate in Oxford University and the LSE. He has been a founder of the Oxford Foundation for Knowledge Exchange and is a Fellow of the Human Capability and Development Association.

Summary

Offers a response to one of the oldest questions known to humankind namely, what is happiness and how can we ensure that communities are flourishing, happy places for people to live and work?

Additional text

Shows how the capability approach of Sen and Nussbaum can be made operational and integrates the most important insights from the booming empirical literature on subjective happiness. This book will be a source of inspiration for everybody who believes that material consumption is not the only contributor to individual wellbeing.

Report

An enjoyable and multifaceted tour... convincingly expounds the need for a rich conception of human well-being in order to quantify individual and social progress. Reto Odermatt, Global Policy

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.