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Exploring geographies of happiness and well-being in Britain

Aims (1). Investigate different definitions of happiness and explore the degree to which happiness varies over time and space Extend existing work on the perception of happiness by providing a detailed explanation of what are the factors and life events that make different types of individuals happy and how these affect the overall structure and cohesion of society. Produce an extensive critical review of existing theories of happiness. Add a geographical dimension to the existing research on happiness. .

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Exploring geographies of happiness and well-being in Britain

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    1. Exploring geographies of happiness and well-being in Britain Dimitris Ballas Social and Spatial Inequalities (SASI) research group Department of Geography University of Sheffield http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/sasi

    2. Aims (1) Investigate different definitions of happiness and explore the degree to which happiness varies over time and space Extend existing work on the perception of happiness by providing a detailed explanation of what are the factors and life events that make different types of individuals happy and how these affect the overall structure and cohesion of society. Produce an extensive critical review of existing theories of happiness. Add a geographical dimension to the existing research on happiness.

    3. Aims (2) Build a geographical model of happiness that will be capable of providing information on the different degrees of happiness attained by people in different regions and localities, under alternative scenarios and happiness definitions. Produce an extensive critical review of existing theories of happiness. Examine the factors and life events affecting happiness during the lifetime of different types of individuals, in order to build a model capable of predicting the future trends in happiness and prosperity for different geographical areas. Explore the relationship between what defines happiness and socio-economic phenomena, such as unemployment and income inequalities

    4. Aims (3) Use a simulation model to estimate the different degrees of happiness attained by people in different regions and localities, under alternative scenarios and happiness definitions. Examine the relationship of happiness and capability, on the basis of past relevant research (such as the work of Sen, 1993) Examine the possible impact of happiness of income and wealth redistribution Investigate the possible impact on happiness of basic income policies which could increase the economic independence of all individuals in society (Van Parijs, 1997 and 2001). Provide projections of how British society will look in the next 10 and 20 years, under alternative assumptions.

    5. What is happiness? Greece, circa 500 BC Socrates, Plato ? Aristotle (384-322 BC) Nichomachean Ethics (350 BC) http://classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/nicomachaen.html England, 18th century Bentham (1748 – 1832), the principle of Utility John Stuart Mill (1806 – 1873) – Utilarianism http://www.utilitarianism.com/

    6. What is happiness? Can it be measured? Human perceptions of happiness vary and depend on a wide range of factors What is the good life for man? The question of what is a full and rich life cannot be answered for an individual in abstraction from the society in which he lives (Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics) Can happiness be measured? Happiness is subjective and no objective theory about the ordinary concept of happiness has the slightest plausibility (Sumner, 1996)

    7. What is happiness? Can it be measured? A person who has had a life of misfortune, with very little opportunities, and rather little hope, may be more easily reconciled to deprivations than others reared in more fortunate and affluent circumstances. The metric of happiness may, therefore, distort the extent of deprivation in a specific and biased way. (Sen, 1987: 45) Can happiness be measured? Oswald and Clark (2002): statistical regression models of happiness measuring the impact of different life events upon human well being

    8. Happiness and economics Happiness is defined as utility Utility can be measured and compared across people Marginal utility of income is assumed to be higher for poor people than for rich people Hicks and Kaldor proposed a measure of national welfare similar to GDP adjusted for leisure and pollution

    9. BUT can Happiness be measured? Richard Layard (2005), Andrew Owswald (2002) and others argue that it can! “By happiness I mean feeling good – enjoying Life and feeling is wonderful. And by Unhappiness I mean feeling bad and wishing things were different” (Layard, 2005)

    11. General Health Questionnaire (1) Have you recently: Been able to concentrate on whatever you are doing? Lost much sleep over worry? Felt that you are playing a useful part in things? Felt capable of making decisions about things? Felt constantly under strain? Felt you could not overcome your difficulties?

    12. General Health Questionnaire (2) Have you recently: Been able to enjoy your normal day-to-day activities? Been able to face up to your problems? Been feeling unhappy or depressed? Been losing confidence in yourself? Been thinking of yourself as a worthless person? Been feeling reasonable happy all things considered?

    13. Happiness in different activities (after Layard, 2005)

    14. Happiness in different activities (after Layard, 2005)

    15. Can happiness be measured? Positive and negative feelings are inversely correlated Happiness can be thought of as a single variable (Layard, 2005)

    16. Happiness and inequality “A house may be large or small; as long as the surrounding houses are equally small it satisfies all social demands for a dwelling. But if a palace arises beside the little house, the little house shrinks to a hovel… [and]… the dweller will feel more and more uncomfortable, dissatisfied and cramped within its four walls.” (Marx and Engels, 1848: 268)

    17. Happiness and inequality “When we are at home, most of us like to live in roughly the same style as our friends or neighbours, or better. If our friends start giving more elaborate parties, we feel we should do the same. Likewise if they have bigger houses or bigger cars.” (Layard, 2005: 43)

    18. Happiness and inequality “… similarly at work, I compare my income with what my colleagues get, in so far as I hear about it. If they get a raise above inflation and I get inflation only, I get mad.” (Layard, 2005: 44)

    19. Happiness and inequality “Interviewing single mothers on council estates a few years ago it was striking that most spoke about their depressing social isolation. They couldn’t afford to keep up with former friends, because they hadn’t the money to make even the most minimal gestures required of a friendship – sending birthday cards or buying rounds of drinks. As one said at the time; ‘My friends will offer to buy me a round - but I have to say no, because I can’t buy the next’. As a consequence, these women’s social circles had shrunk to their mothers and their lovers, because these were the only relationships which could be maintained without the expectation of financial reciprocity.” (Russell, 2006: 93)

    20. The “One Percent Is Always The Same” (OPIATS) rule “This rule implies that if my income is $100,000 and I give $20,000 of it to the poor, my well-being falls by a fifth. If I divide my $20,000 equally between ten people with incomes of $10,000 ten people’s well-being will rise by a fifth. The gains from this gift will thus exceed the losses by a factor of ten. The utilitarian case for governmental redistribution almost always reflects this logic: taxing the rich won’t do them much harm, and helping the poor will do them a lot of good. If you look at the actual relationship between income and outcomes like health and happiness the OPIATS rule seldom describes the relationship perfectly but it comes far closer than the ‘One Dollar is Always the Same’ rule, which is the only rule under which income inequality does not affect health or happiness”. (Jencks, 2002: 57)

    21. Exploring geographies of happiness What is the degree of happiness attained by different types of individuals in various localities and regions in Britain? Does space matter? Happiness and inequality and space: rethinking regional economic policy Happiness, prosperity and regional/local GDP growth Is the source of happiness or unhappiness personal or it has more to do with inequalities in the distribution of income, wealth, skills and capability? Rivalry and geography – rivalries of place

    22. Exploring geographies of happiness “… the broad impression is that social class stratification establishes itself primarily as a national social structure, though there are perhaps also some more local civic hierarchies – for instance within cities and US states. But it should go without saying that classes are defined in relation to each other: one is higher because the other is lower, and vice versa. The lower class identity of people in a poor neighbourhood is inevitably defined in relation to a hierarchy which includes a knowledge of the existence of superior classes who may live in other areas some distance away.”   (Wilkinson and Pickett, 2006: 7, my emphasis)

    23. Links between income inequality and population health (Wilkinson and Picket, 2006) The proportion of analyses classified as wholly supportive falls from 83% (of all wholly supportive or unsupportive) in the international studies to 73% in the large sub-national areas, to 45% among the smallest spatial units. The spatial scale at which people make their social comparisons is more likely to be the nation state (arguably reflecting socio-economic position) than it is to locality (reflecting position within neighbourhood).

    27. Modelling happiness and well-being Regression models Multi-level modelling approaches Microsimulation and Spatial Microsimulation

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