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Howell, Ryan T.; Kurai, Mark; Tam, Leona – Social Indicators Research, 2013
The most prominent theory to explain the curvilinear relationship between income and subjective well-being (SWB) is need theory, which proposes that increased income and wealth can lead to increased well-being in poverty because money is used to satisfy basic physiological needs. The present study tests the tenets of need theory by proposing that…
Descriptors: Psychological Needs, Need Gratification, Well Being, Income
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Sall, Aliou – Social Indicators Research, 2012
The marine fishery in Senegal, West Africa, is a major source of employment and food security. It currently faces the consequences of ecological degradation. This paper examines job satisfaction among small-scale purse seine fishers, who constitute one of the dominant fishing metiers in Senegal. The research sample consists of 80 purse seine…
Descriptors: Environment, Animal Husbandry, Foreign Countries, Job Satisfaction
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Wong, Chack-Kie; Lou, Vivian Wei-Qun – Social Indicators Research, 2010
This qualitative study explores the welfare recipients' experiences of and attitudes toward the welfare benefit system in Hong Kong. A sample of 19 welfare recipients from six main recipient groups was interviewed, some twice. This study finds that the recipients have strong aspirations to exit the welfare benefit system. The welfare application…
Descriptors: Life Satisfaction, Foreign Countries, Welfare Recipients, Qualitative Research
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Ferrer-i-Carbonell, Ada; Gerxhani, Klarita – Social Indicators Research, 2011
This paper examines the relationship between working in the formal or informal sector and self-reported individual financial satisfaction in a country in transition. It does so by allowing for individual heterogeneity in terms of perceived financial insecurity and tax morale. The empirical analysis uses a dataset for Albania, a country in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Security (Psychology), Labor Market, Social Indicators
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Chua, Hoi-wai; Wong, Anthony K. W.; Shek, Daniel T. L. – Social Indicators Research, 2010
Surviving the aftermaths of the Asian Financial Crisis and SARS in 2003, Hong Kong's economy has re-gained its momentum and its economic growth has been quite remarkable too in recent few years. Nevertheless, as reflected by the Social Development Index (SDI), economic growth in Hong Kong does not seem to have benefited the people of the city at…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Social Planning, Quality of Life, Social Indicators
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Mammen, Sheila; Bauer, Jean W.; Richards, Leslie – Social Indicators Research, 2009
Survey data from a U.S. Department of Agriculture funded multi-state longitudinal project revealed a paradox where rural low-income families from states considered prosperous were persistently more food insecure than similar families from less prosperous states. An examination of quantitative and qualitative data found that families in the food…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Human Capital, Life Satisfaction, Agriculture
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Scherer, Stefani – Social Indicators Research, 2009
Forms of insecure employment have been increasing all over Europe in recent decades. These developments have been welcomed by those who argued that these types of flexible employment would not only foster employment but could also help women, in particular, to positively combine work and family life. This vision was questioned by others who argued…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Family Life, Foreign Countries, Job Security
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Burgess, John; Campbell, Iain; May, Robyn – Social Indicators Research, 2008
Casual employment is extensive and has been increasing for more than two decades in Australia. The concept of casual employment used in the Australian context is unusual, but it is directly linked to benefit and rights exclusion within the regulatory framework governing employment. The expansion in casual employment has spread across all sectors,…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries, Income
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Monnickendam, Menachem; Berman, Yitzhak – Social Indicators Research, 2008
Social quality has been presented as a theory that can explain economic and social progress of the daily lives of a population. The components of social quality include: socio-economic security, social inclusion, social cohesion and social empowerment. The social quality perspective views people as interacting within collective identities that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethics, Economic Progress, Socioeconomic Status
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Laghi, Fiorenzo; D'Alessio, Maria; Pallini, Susanna; Baiocco, Roberto – Social Indicators Research, 2009
This study examines the relationship between attachment to parents and peers, time perspective and psychological adjustment in adolescence. 2,665 adolescents (M age = 17.03 years, SD = 1.48) completed self-report measures about parent and peer attachment, time perspective, sympathy and self-determination. Subjects were divided into four groups…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Adolescents, Parent Child Relationship, Time Perspective
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Edwards, Mark Evan; Weber, Bruce; Bernell, Stephanie – Social Indicators Research, 2007
An existing measure of food insecurity with hunger in the United States may serve as an effective indicator of quality of life. State level differences in that measure can reveal important differences in quality of life across places. In this study, we advocate and demonstrate two simple methods by which analysts can explore state-specific…
Descriptors: Food, Security (Psychology), Prediction, Quality of Life
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MacPhail, Fiona; Bowles, Paul – Social Indicators Research, 2008
Analysis of casual work in British Columbia is an important issue given that the increase in casual work has been greater in this province than in other provinces in Canada and given that the labour market has been substantially deregulated since 2001. In this paper, we analyse how individuals' casual employment status affects their economic…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Labor Market, Foreign Countries, Security (Psychology)
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Fuller, Sylvia; Vosko, Leah F. – Social Indicators Research, 2008
Using data from the 2002-2004 waves of Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics, this article investigates the consequences of different types of temporary employment--fixed-term or contract, casual, agency and seasonal employment--for differently situated workers in Canada. Attention to intersecting social locations of gender, race and immigrant…
Descriptors: Temporary Employment, Seasonal Employment, Foreign Countries, Immigration
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Scott-Marshall, Heather – Social Indicators Research, 2010
This study examines the association between work-related insecurity and health, with a focus on how this relationship is moderated by social location (gender, age and race). Drawing on longitudinal data from a Canadian labour market survey (1999-2004) the findings show that certain groups have a higher prevalence of exposure to certain types of…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Job Satisfaction, Labor Market, Occupational Mobility
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Coleman-Jensen, Alisha Judith – Social Indicators Research, 2010
United States Department of Agriculture defines food insecure as answering affirmatively to three or more food insecurity questions describing a household's ability to acquire enough food. Households indicating low levels of food insecurity (one or two affirmative responses) are considered food secure. This paper compares the characteristics of…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Family (Sociological Unit), Quality of Life, Purchasing
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