Authors
Robert Costanza, Brendan Fisher, Saleem Ali, Caroline Beer, Lynne Bond, Roelof Boumans, Nicholas L Danigelis, Jennifer Dickinson, Carolyn Elliott, Joshua Farley, Diane Elliott Gayer, Linda MacDonald Glenn, Thomas Hudspeth, Dennis Mahoney, Laurence McCahill, Barbara McIntosh, Brian Reed, S Abu Turab Rizvi, Donna M Rizzo, Thomas Simpatico, Robert Snapp
Publication date
2007/3/1
Journal
Ecological economics
Volume
61
Issue
2-3
Pages
267-276
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Enhancing Quality of Life (QOL) has long been an explicit or implicit goal for individuals, communities, nations, and the world. But defining QOL and measuring progress toward meeting this goal have been elusive. Diverse “objective” and “subjective” indicators across a range of disciplines and scales, and recent work on subjective well-being (SWB) surveys and the psychology of happiness have spurred interest. Drawing from multiple disciplines, we present an integrative definition of QOL that combines measures of human needs with subjective well-being or happiness. QOL is proposed as a multi-scale, multi-dimensional concept that contains interacting objective and subjective elements. We relate QOL to the opportunities that are provided to meet human needs in the forms of built, human, social and natural capital (in addition to time) and the policy options that are available to enhance these opportunities …
Total citations
20072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202418192331416865879613613310917913713013913159
Scholar articles
R Costanza, B Fisher, S Ali, C Beer - Danigelis, Jennifer Dickinson, Carolyn Elliott, Joshua …, 2007