Time Well Spent: Subjective Well-Being and the Organization of Time

Daniel Wheatley

Time Well Spent: Subjective Well-Being and the Organization of Time
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield International
Country
United Kingdom
Published
16 May 2017
Pages
272
ISBN
9781783484256

Time Well Spent: Subjective Well-Being and the Organization of Time

Daniel Wheatley

Measuring quality of life has been identified as fundamental in assessing the relative progress of societies and as having relevance for both monitoring and policy-making purposes. Self-reported measures of well-being, referred to as subjective well-being, have become increasingly topical given the growing awareness of the limitations of existing measures of well-being including gross domestic product (GDP). In the UK, the ONS’s ‘Happiness Index’ was launched in 2010 by Prime Minister David Cameron.

This book aims to improve our understanding of well-being through an analysis of time-use in a post-industrial society, the UK, drawing on empirical data from large-scale surveys such as Understanding Society and smaller-scale case study evidence. It uses a plurality of theoretical perspectives to explore the relationship between our use of time and our reported levels of satisfaction, and considers the policy lessons that we can take from our organization of time.

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