E-Thesis 1250 views 343 downloads
An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being / Samuel Brown
Swansea University Author: Samuel Brown
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DOI (Published version): 10.23889/Suthesis.50964
Abstract
An increase in the government’s interest in well-being over recent years has led to much new research in these fields. This thesis considers subjective well-being, exploring how it is affected by employment contracts, life events and religiosity. Since the economic crisis of 2008/9 there has been an...
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2019
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|---|---|
| Institution: | Swansea University |
| Degree level: | Doctoral |
| Degree name: | Ph.D |
| URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa50964 |
| first_indexed |
2019-06-28T20:53:48Z |
|---|---|
| last_indexed |
2025-03-20T07:27:34Z |
| id |
cronfa50964 |
| recordtype |
RisThesis |
| fullrecord |
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| spelling |
2025-03-19T12:37:51.7356617 v2 50964 2019-06-28 An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being 38b9bf1e367ef6a452abe0598d97bf57 NULL Samuel Brown Samuel Brown true true 2019-06-28 An increase in the government’s interest in well-being over recent years has led to much new research in these fields. This thesis considers subjective well-being, exploring how it is affected by employment contracts, life events and religiosity. Since the economic crisis of 2008/9 there has been an increase in certain employment contracts (such as zero-hour contracts). The effect of these different employment contracts has been explored here, with a focus on whether omitting unemployed individuals from such research will bias the results. Big life events, such as unemployment, marriage, divorce, disability, etc. can have a big impact upon an individual’s well-being. These impacts have been investigated here, considering also anticipation (changes in well-being in the lead up to the event) and adaptation (changes to well-being following the event). There is also a focus on how individuals at different points along the well-being distribution respond differently to these life events. Religiosity has generally been found to have a positive impact upon well-being. However, this relationship has not considered the indirect impact that religiosity may have on well-being through its effects on social capital, income, employment status, marital status, education and health. These indirect effects are explored here, splitting the analysis by gender and religion/denomination. The research performed here identifies many vulnerable groups who suffer strong negative effects from employment, life events or religiosity. Therefore, this research has many policy implications. E-Thesis Well-being, employment contracts, adaptation, anticipation, religiosity 31 12 2019 2019-12-31 10.23889/Suthesis.50964 COLLEGE NANME Economics COLLEGE CODE Swansea University Doctoral Ph.D Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) 2025-03-19T12:37:51.7356617 2019-06-28T15:22:54.9292129 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Social Sciences - Economics Samuel Brown NULL 1 0050964-28062019153117.pdf Brown_Samuel_PhD_Thesis_Final.pdf 2019-06-28T15:31:17.7230000 Output 2569528 application/pdf E-Thesis – open access true 2020-06-30T00:00:00.0000000 true |
| title |
An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being |
| spellingShingle |
An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being Samuel Brown |
| title_short |
An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being |
| title_full |
An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being |
| title_fullStr |
An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being |
| title_full_unstemmed |
An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being |
| title_sort |
An investigation of the socio-economic relationship between civil society and social capital on subjective well-being |
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38b9bf1e367ef6a452abe0598d97bf57 |
| author_id_fullname_str_mv |
38b9bf1e367ef6a452abe0598d97bf57_***_Samuel Brown |
| author |
Samuel Brown |
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Samuel Brown |
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E-Thesis |
| publishDate |
2019 |
| institution |
Swansea University |
| doi_str_mv |
10.23889/Suthesis.50964 |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences - Economics{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Social Sciences - Economics |
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| description |
An increase in the government’s interest in well-being over recent years has led to much new research in these fields. This thesis considers subjective well-being, exploring how it is affected by employment contracts, life events and religiosity. Since the economic crisis of 2008/9 there has been an increase in certain employment contracts (such as zero-hour contracts). The effect of these different employment contracts has been explored here, with a focus on whether omitting unemployed individuals from such research will bias the results. Big life events, such as unemployment, marriage, divorce, disability, etc. can have a big impact upon an individual’s well-being. These impacts have been investigated here, considering also anticipation (changes in well-being in the lead up to the event) and adaptation (changes to well-being following the event). There is also a focus on how individuals at different points along the well-being distribution respond differently to these life events. Religiosity has generally been found to have a positive impact upon well-being. However, this relationship has not considered the indirect impact that religiosity may have on well-being through its effects on social capital, income, employment status, marital status, education and health. These indirect effects are explored here, splitting the analysis by gender and religion/denomination. The research performed here identifies many vulnerable groups who suffer strong negative effects from employment, life events or religiosity. Therefore, this research has many policy implications. |
| published_date |
2019-12-31T05:54:53Z |
| _version_ |
1850737158017515520 |
| score |
11.08895 |

