2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0163345
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Subjective Wellbeing, Objective Wellbeing and Inequality in Australia

Abstract: In recent years policy makers and social scientists have devoted considerable attention to wellbeing, a concept that refers to people’s capacity to live healthy, creative and fulfilling lives. Two conceptual approaches dominate wellbeing research. The objective approach examines the objective components of a good life. The subjective approach examines people’s subjective evaluations of their lives. In the objective approach how subjective wellbeing relates to objective wellbeing is not a relevant research ques… Show more

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Cited by 151 publications
(106 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(51 reference statements)
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“…The questionnaire prior to the animal‐assisted therapy consisted of two questions about the children's well‐being at the moment and experiences of attending paediatric hospital care, referred to in the present study as a hospital stay. Well‐being can be described objectively or subjectively, and the concept of well‐being is broad . In the present study, the children performed a subjective overall assessment of their well‐being by answering the question of how they were feeling at that moment.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The questionnaire prior to the animal‐assisted therapy consisted of two questions about the children's well‐being at the moment and experiences of attending paediatric hospital care, referred to in the present study as a hospital stay. Well‐being can be described objectively or subjectively, and the concept of well‐being is broad . In the present study, the children performed a subjective overall assessment of their well‐being by answering the question of how they were feeling at that moment.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Gasper (2007), actual wellbeing is an "externally approved, and thereby normatively endorsed, non-feeling features of a person's life, matters such as mobility or morbidity." It captures the material resources (level of pay/income, food, shelter) and public attributes (education, health care, infrastructure, community networks) that individuals must have to survive and fulfil their needs (Western & Tomaszewski, 2016). In contrast, subjective wellbeing captures individuals' assessment of their life evaluations based on what they feel and think (Diener et al, 1999).…”
Section: Authentic Leadership Rewards Meaningful Work and Wellbeinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kearns and Andrews, (2010) understood it as simply including "being well" and "feeling well", that is, physical and emotional satisfaction. Well-being can be objective or subjective (Western and Tomaszewski, 2016). Subjective well-being is a concept widely used in research, and is defined as the degree to which an individual positively evaluates the overall quality of their lives (Bergstad, Gamble, et al, 2011;Diener, Emmons, et al, 1985).…”
Section: Motivation Benefits and Well-being From Cyclingmentioning
confidence: 99%