Our book is a useful "how to" book for researchers and
government offices wanting to start or improve their own QOL
survey, and contains "best practices" from all over the world. We
discuss cutting-edge surveys that are being adopted by all
countries in the European community as a standardized measure of
each country's progress. We also discuss how developing countries
can begin the measurement of Quality of Life in ways that will
increase political credibility and require smaller budgets. Other
chapters describe policy applications of the Quality of Life
surveys, including nations' health goals, smoking cessation, child
welfare, and poverty reduction.
The authors of these chapters are the world's top experts on
assessing Quality of Life. For example, the author of the first
chapter is Sten Johansson, former Director of Statistics Sweden,
responsible for creating the first comprehensive QOL assessment
systems in the world, beginning in the 1960's. The author of the
second chapter is Professor Ruut Veenhoven, known as the premier
researcher on national happiness, having developed the largest
database in the world on the subjective measures of well-being.
Heinz-Herbert Noll is responsible for developing the unified
Quality of Life measurement system for the new European Union,
where up to 25 countries will be assessed using the same
methodology and questionnaires.
This volume is a valuable resource for four groups of readers.
To researchers interested in best practices for well-established
surveys of living conditions, the papers by Boelhouwer, Noll,
Vogel, and Berger-Schmitt will be of special interest. To
researchers and policy analysts interested in establishing a
living-conditions report in their country, the papers by Kamen,
Moller and Dickow, Estes, Andersen and Poppel, May, Stevens and
Stols and Aasland and Tyldum give invaluable information about
developing credibility, consensus-building, and survey design. For
researchers interested in cross-national comparison, the papers by
Hudler and Richter, and Delhey, Bohnke, Habich, and Zapf describe
the rich resources already available, as well as problems of
different wording, interpretation, etc. Finally, for citizens
wishing to effect changes in public policy, and for researchers
studying that process, the papers by Ferris, Estes, Hagerty, and
Behrendt outline how organizations should select goals, utilize
social indicators, and develop programs that improve the Quality of
Life in their nations. "
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