Keywords
Rural life - Society and cultureMORAL VALUES
SATISFACTION
RESOURCES
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
ACCESS TO FACILITIES
ATTITUDES
VALUES
HAPPINESS
MARITAL STATUS
ASPIRATION
SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT
ETHNIC GROUPS
PERSONALITY TRAITS
QUALITY OF LIFE
AGE
GENDER
330
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
SOCIAL VALUES
CHILDREN
CULTURAL RESOURCES
LIFE SATISFACTION
SOCIAL ATTITUDES
INTERETHNIC RELATIONS
OBJECTIVES
EMOTIONAL STATES
CULTURAL VALUES
General - Health
ACCESS TO PUBLIC SERVICES
Social indicators and quality of life - Society and culture
EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES
PERSONALITY
Community and urban studies - Society and culture
RELIGION
ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT
HEALTH
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http://purl.org/poi/iesr.ac.uk/1229991307-22833Abstract
Wellbeing in Developing Countries is a series of studies which aim to develop a conceptual and methodological approach to understanding the social and cultural construction of wellbeing in developing countries. The Wellbeing in Developing Countries Research Group (WeD), based at the University of Bath, drew on knowledge and expertise from three different departments (Economics and International Development, Social and Policy Sciences and Psychology) as well as a network of overseas contacts. The international, interdisciplinary team formed a major programme of comparative research, focused on six communities in each of four countries: Ethiopia, Thailand, Peru and Bangladesh. All sites within the countries have been given anonymous site names, with the exception of Ethiopia where the team chose to follow an alternative locally agreed procedure on anonymisation. Data can be matched across studies using the HOUSEKEY (Site code and household number). The research raises fundamental questions both for the academic study of development, and for the policy community. The WeD arrived at the following definition of wellbeing through their research: "Wellbeing is a state of being with others, where human needs are met, where one can act meaningfully to pursue one's goals, and where one enjoys a satisfactory quality of life". Further information about the project can be found on the WeD website and the ESRC Award webpage. Wellbeing in Developing Countries: Quality of Life, 2004-2005 comprises the Quality of Life (QoL) Survey which was carried out in each of the four countries. The QoL was administered to approx 370 men and women in each country (approximately 60 per research site) in the local language by a team of interviewers selected by each of the country teams. The majority of respondents also completed the other surveys that form part of this research project and are available from the UKDA under GN 33394. The remainder were sampled proportionately according to age, socio-economic status, ethnicity and religion. For each country there is one data file at the individual level. Main Topics:Topics covered include:positive and negative affect Scale (PANAS)goalssatisfaction with goal attainmentvalues (both individual and group) satisfaction with life scale (SWLS)Type
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oai:iesr.ac.uk:1229991307-22833http://purl.org/poi/iesr.ac.uk/1229991307-22833
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Copyright A. McGregorCollections
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Cultural Heritage and Development : A Framework for Action in the Middle East and North AfricaWorld Bank (Washington, DC, 2013-06-13)The countries of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are blessed with an extraordinary cultural patrimony, secular and religious, of huge importance for each country and for humankind at large. The region is home to 48 sites already inscribed on the world heritage list maintained by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and has an enormous nonmaterial heritage as well. The Middle East is also the cradle of the world's major monotheistic religions. This cultural patrimony is a cornerstone of many people's existence and nourishes their daily lives. It must continue to flourish. This report analyzes the cultural heritage sector in the countries of the Middle East and North Africa, and the World Bank's policy and operational experiences in this sector over the past six years, 1996-2001. It has three objectives: 1) to explore the characteristics, capacities, needs, and constraints of the region's cultural sector and their relevance to overall country development; 2) to take stock, describe, and analyze the World Bank's past and current support for preservation and management of the region's cultural heritage; and 3) to extract the lessons of experience and define the strategy framework for future Bank assistance for preserving and managing the MENA region's patrimony.
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