What the World Happiness Report doesn’t see: The sociocultural contours of wellbeing in northern Tanzania

Q1 Economics, Econometrics and Finance
M. Kaufman, A. Guest, Blandina T. Mmbaga, Prosper A. Mbelwa, Julie E. Hyatt, D. Mushi, Joanitha Tibendelana, Paul Y. O. Saing'eu, Elizabeth F. Msoka-Bright, Amina Swalele, J. Kessy
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Abstract

This paper presents a mixed methods approach to understanding wellbeing in the Kilimanjaro region of northern Tanzania—a country consistently ranked by the World Happiness Report as one of the least happy in the world. A primary objective is to demonstrate how qualitative data offering bottom-up perspectives on wellbeing offer a necessary complement to quantitative self-report measures, allowing for more nuanced cultural understandings of lived experience and wellbeing that recognize diversity both globally and locally. The research contextualized responses to standardized life evaluations (including the Cantril ladder question used by the World Happiness Report) through observations and interviews along with culturally sensitive measures of emotional experience. Findings show Kilimanjaro to have more positive life evaluations than Tanzania as a whole, and significant within-region demographic variation driven particularly by lower levels of wellbeing for nonprofessional women compared with nonprofessional men and professionals. In part because such demographic groups were often unfamiliar with standardized self-report measures, it was only through interviews, case studies, and culturally sensitive reports of emotional experience that we were able to recognize the diverse and nuanced life circumstances which individuals and groups were navigating and how those circumstances interacted with wellbeing. Drawing on the example of nonprofessional women for illustration, we describe how key sociocultural factors – particularly, family stability, parenting circumstances, social relationships, and meeting life course expectations -- intersect with economic realities to create varied experiences of wellbeing. The complex picture of locally understood wellbeing that emerged from this research presents an alternative picture to global perspectives reliant on survey self-reports. It serves as a reminder of the importance of methodological choices in global wellbeing research and urges the addition of local perspectives and paradigms to inform policy and practice.
《世界幸福报告》没有看到的:坦桑尼亚北部幸福的社会文化轮廓
本文提出了一种混合方法来理解坦桑尼亚北部乞力马扎罗山地区的幸福感。该国一直被《世界幸福报告》列为世界上最不幸福的国家之一。一个主要目标是证明提供自下而上的幸福观的定性数据如何为定量的自我报告措施提供必要的补充,允许对生活体验和幸福感进行更细致的文化理解,承认全球和当地的多样性。该研究通过观察和访谈以及对情感体验的文化敏感测量,将对标准化生活评估的反应(包括《世界幸福报告》使用的Cantril阶梯问题)置于情境中。调查结果显示,乞力马扎罗山的生活评价比整个坦桑尼亚更为积极,地区内人口结构差异显著,尤其是非专业女性的幸福感水平低于非专业男性和专业人士。部分原因是这些人口群体往往不熟悉标准化的自我报告措施,只有通过访谈、案例研究和对情感体验具有文化敏感性的报告,我们才能认识到个人和群体所处的多样而微妙的生活环境,以及这些环境如何与幸福感相互作用。以非专业女性为例,我们描述了关键的社会文化因素——特别是家庭稳定、育儿环境、社会关系和满足人生期望——如何与经济现实相交叉,创造各种幸福体验。这项研究中出现的当地人理解的幸福感的复杂画面,为依赖调查自我报告的全球视角提供了另一种画面。它提醒人们在全球福祉研究中方法选择的重要性,并敦促增加地方视角和范式,为政策和实践提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Wellbeing
International Journal of Wellbeing Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
审稿时长
10 weeks
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