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Research Articles

Sustainable Well-Being Indicators and Public Policy: A Cluster Analysis

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Pages 89-100 | Received 03 Mar 2022, Accepted 18 Nov 2022, Published online: 07 Dec 2022
 

Abstract

This paper contributes to the alternative indicators movement. It focuses on how data on sustainable well-being can be synthesized to steer public action. While data on well-being or sustainability are usually summarized in dashboards, composite indexes or territorial typological analysis, this article aims to highlight the interest of the cluster method in an approach of public policy to identify profiles of people who are ‘well-off’ or ‘poor’ in terms of well-being. This approach places people rather than territories at the centre of the analysis. We describe how the cluster method has been used in a project focussing on indicators of sustainable well-being conducted in Grenoble in France, and the advantages it offers. In particular, it facilitates: (1) divestment from pre-existing categorizations used in public action; (2) identification of the heterogeneity of the difficulties encountered by different groups and the vicious or virtuous circles in which these persons find themselves; (3) the development of new courses of public action; and (4) the appropriation and use of the data by local actors. In the case of Grenoble, the data reveal that people who are women, in poor health, and with few people around them whom they can trust are more likely to encounter problems achieving well-being.

JEL CLASSIFICATION CODES:

Notes

1 In this article, we treat the terms ‘group’ and ‘profile’ as equivalents, and use them interchangeably.

2 This participatory phase included several steps that are not detailed here but are presented in Ottaviani (Citation2018).

3 These indexes are described in detail in Le Roy and Ottaviani (Citation2022) and Ottaviani (Citation2018).

4 The software used to conduct the analysis was SPSS.

5 To judge these results, our analysis was based on the Cramer V measure of association.

6 More information on the doughnut approach can be found in: https://doughnuteconomics.org/

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