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Cheung, Chau-kiu – Social Indicators Research, 2013
Public policies can be effective in raising people's social inclusion as intended only reasonably through their implementation. With respect to the implementation perspective, this study examines the effectiveness of eight policies as perceived to implement in Hong Kong, China. The study employs data collected from 1,109 Chinese adults randomly…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Foreign Countries, Citizenship Education, Telephone Surveys
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Cheung, Chau-kiu; Ngan, Raymond Man-hung – Social Indicators Research, 2012
Filtering the measure of life satisfaction through the bias of social desirability and response styles would furnish an adequate analysis of socioeconomic impacts on the filtered life satisfaction. The filtering is necessary because social desirability and the response styles of acquiescence, extremity, and centrality are likely to contaminate the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Desirability, Family Income, Life Satisfaction
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Cheung, Chau-kiu; Ma, Stephen Kan – Social Indicators Research, 2011
The various forms of social solidarity are empirically uncharted, especially in relation to social harmony. With respect to resource exchange theory, inclusive solidarity or intergroup acceptance is more conducive to social harmony than mechanical, organic, distributive, and dialogic forms of solidarity. The theoretical prediction holds in the…
Descriptors: Social Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Social Indicators, Intergroup Relations
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Cheung, Chau-kiu; Chan, Raymond Kwok-hong – Social Indicators Research, 2010
A way to clarify the measurement of social capital is the differentiation of its bases on opportunity and exchange. Social capital based on opportunity incorporates organizational participation, network strength, trust, helping and continuing relationships, whereas social capital based on exchange consists of the investment and reciprocation of…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Morale, Measurement, Social Indicators
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Cheung, Chau-kiu; Leung, Kwan-kwok – Social Indicators Research, 2008
Proponents of social equality attribute low life satisfaction to income inequality in society, an inequality which occurs when most people have relatively low income and only a few have high income. In contrast, range-frequency theory and other social comparison theories predict that when most people have low income, they are satisfied because of…
Descriptors: Low Income, Life Satisfaction, Prediction, Foreign Countries
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Cheung, Chau-kiu; Leung, Kwan-kwok – Social Indicators Research, 2008
Claims about the impacts of environmental quality associated with urban renewal on the resident's subjective quality of life are more speculative than empirically grounded. To clarify the impacts of environmental quality under urban renewal, this study surveyed 876 residents living in housing surrounding seven urban renewal sites in Hong Kong. It…
Descriptors: Quality of Life, Foreign Countries, Urban Renewal, Environmental Standards
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Cheung, Chau-kiu; Leung, Kwan-kwok – Social Indicators Research, 2007
Social welfare is supposedly beneficial not only to the needy receiving it but to citizens in general who expect social welfare to help the needy. Whereas direct benefits to the needy represent the gratification of material needs, the fulfillment of citizens' expectation registers an idealistic path to life satisfaction. These materialistic and…
Descriptors: Life Satisfaction, Foreign Countries, Welfare Services, Social Indicators
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Cheung, Chau-kiu; Leung, Kwan-kwok – Social Indicators Research, 2007
Finding the rationale for democracy requires not merely a conceptual task but also an empirical study. One rationale is that democracy maximizes people's happiness by satisfying everyone. A further qualification of this is that democracy minimizes the maximum regret of the disadvantaged. This is compatible with the protection theory of government,…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Life Satisfaction, Democracy, Foreign Countries