Percentage of persons aged 15 years and over by level of life satisfaction, by gender, for Canada, regions and provinces.
Number and percentage of persons being satisfied or very satisfied with their life in general, by age group and sex.
Percentage of persons aged 15 years and over by level of life satisfaction, by gender and other selected sociodemographic characteristics: age group; immigrant status; visible minority group; Indigenous identity; persons with a disability, difficulty or long-term condition; LGBTQ2+ people; highest certificate, diploma or degree; main activity; and urban and rural areas.
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The data and programs replicate tables and figures from "'Tiger-Hunting' and Life Satisfaction: A Matter of Trust", by Zhang, Howley, and Hetschko. Please see the ReadMe file for additional details. The code in this replication package constructs the analysis files and produce all tables/figures except for Table A1 using Stata.
The Alberta Survey program is a telephone conducted survey of Albertans, to collect data on specific determinants of health to support the creation of material and social deprivation indices, and assess their effects on health. This dataset contains individual level survey response details for the category Life Satisfaction, along with a supporting document containing a column description for this dataset. Aggregate level datasets for select determinants based upon the ACHS are also available.
The Alberta Survey program is a telephone conducted survey of Albertans, to collect data on specific determinants of health to support the creation of material and social deprivation indices, and assess their effects on health. This dataset contains individual level survey response details for the category Life Satisfaction, along with a supporting document containing a column description for this dataset. Aggregate level datasets for select determinants based upon the ACHS are also available.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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The Alberta Survey program is a telephone conducted survey of Albertans, to collect data on specific determinants of health to support the creation of material and social deprivation indices, and assess their effects on health. This dataset contains individual level survey response details for the category Life Satisfaction, along with a supporting document containing a column description for this dataset. Aggregate level datasets for select determinants based upon the ACHS are also available.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Estimates of Life Satisfaction from the Annual Population Survey Personal Well-being dataset by Personal Characteristics and Geography.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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Life satisfaction, satisfied or very satisfied, by age group and sex, by province and territory
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
Standard deviation of responses for 'Life Satisfaction' in the First ONS Annual Experimental Subjective Wellbeing survey.
The Office for National Statistics has included the four subjective well-being questions below on the Annual Population Survey (APS), the largest of their household surveys.
This dataset presents results from the first of these questions, "Overall, how satisfied are you with your life nowadays?". Respondents answer these questions on an 11 point scale from 0 to 10 where 0 is ‘not at all’ and 10 is ‘completely’. The well-being questions were asked of adults aged 16 and older.
Well-being estimates for each unitary authority or county are derived using data from those respondents who live in that place. Responses are weighted to the estimated population of adults (aged 16 and older) as at end of September 2011.
The data cabinet also makes available the proportion of people in each county and unitary authority that answer with ‘low wellbeing’ values. For the ‘life satisfaction’ question answers in the range 0-6 are taken to be low wellbeing.
This dataset contains the standard deviation of the responses, alongside the corresponding sample size.
The ONS survey covers the whole of the UK, but this dataset only includes results for counties and unitary authorities in England, for consistency with other statistics available at this website.
At this stage the estimates are considered ‘experimental statistics’, published at an early stage to involve users in their development and to allow feedback. Feedback can be provided to the ONS via this email address.
The APS is a continuous household survey administered by the Office for National Statistics. It covers the UK, with the chief aim of providing between-census estimates of key social and labour market variables at a local area level. Apart from employment and unemployment, the topics covered in the survey include housing, ethnicity, religion, health and education. When a household is surveyed all adults (aged 16+) are asked the four subjective well-being questions.
The 12 month Subjective Well-being APS dataset is a sub-set of the general APS as the well-being questions are only asked of persons aged 16 and above, who gave a personal interview and proxy answers are not accepted. This reduces the size of the achieved sample to approximately 120,000 adult respondents in England.
The original data is available from the ONS website.
Detailed information on the APS and the Subjective Wellbeing dataset is available here.
As well as collecting data on well-being, the Office for National Statistics has published widely on the topic of wellbeing. Papers and further information can be found here.
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Differences between means of top and bottom life satisfaction quintiles of tracted regions.
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This dataset was created in order to document self-reported life evaluations among small-scale societies that exist on the fringes of mainstream industrialized socieities. The data were produced as part of the LICCI project, through fieldwork carried out by LICCI partners. The data include individual responses to a life satisfaction question, and household asset values. Data from Gallup World Poll and the World Values Survey are also included, as used for comparison. TABULAR DATA-SPECIFIC INFORMATION --------------------------------- 1. File name: LICCI_individual.csv Number of rows and columns: 2814,7 Variable list: Variable names: User, Site, village Description: identification of investigator and location Variable name: Well.being.general Description: numerical score for life satisfaction question Variable names: HH_Assets_US, HH_Assets_USD_capita Description: estimated value of representative assets in the household of respondent, total and per capita (accounting for number of household inhabitants) 2. File name: LICCI_bySite.csv Number of rows and columns: 19,8 Variable list: Variable names: Site, N Description: site name and number of respondents at the site Variable names: SWB_mean, SWB_SD Description: mean and standard deviation of life satisfaction score Variable names: HHAssets_USD_mean, HHAssets_USD_sd Description: Site mean and standard deviation of household asset value Variable names: PerCapAssets_USD_mean, PerCapAssets_USD_sd Description: Site mean and standard deviation of per capita asset value 3. File name: gallup_WVS_GDP_pk.csv Number of rows and columns: 146,8 Variable list: Variable name: Happiness Score, Whisker-high, Whisker-low Description: from Gallup World Poll as documented in World Happiness Report 2022. Variable name: GDP-PPP2017 Description: Gross Domestic Product per capita for year 2020 at PPP (constant 2017 international $). Accessed May 2022. Variable name: pk Description: Produced capital per capita for year 2018 (in 2018 US$) for available countries, as estimated by the World Bank (accessed February 2022). Variable names: WVS7_mean, WVS7_std Description: Results of Question 49 in the World Values Survey, Wave 7.
Finland was the country that registered the highest life satisfaction across the OECD, with a score of *** points out of 10 possible in the Life Satisfaction Index. Iceland and Denmark positioned second and third with scores of *** and *** out of 10 respectively.
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Happiness and life satisfaction The relationship between life satisfaction and happiness is an important area within the field of positive psychology. Most researchers assert a positive link between life satisfaction and happiness [17,32,35,36,37], while seeing happiness as being more emotional and life satisfaction more cognitive in nature. The relationship between life satisfaction and happiness is an important area within the field of positive psychology. Most researchers see happiness as being more emotional in nature, while life satisfaction is more cognitive in nature.
@article{owidhappinessandlifesatisfaction, author = {Esteban Ortiz-Ospina and Max Roser}, title = {Happiness and Life Satisfaction}, journal = {Our World in Data}, year = {2013}, note = {https://ourworldindata.org/happiness-and-life-satisfaction} }
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Average (mean) rating for 'Life Satisfaction' by County and Unitary Authority in the First ONS Annual Experimental Subjective Wellbeing survey, April 2011 - March 2012.
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Life satisfaction, osteopathy
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GUI71 - Life Satisfaction of Respondents aged 25 years - Dataset - data.gov.ie
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Longitudinal study on grit, posttraumatic growth after COVID-19 and life satisfaction at the beginning and end of the school year
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/
Percentage of responses in the range 0-6 for 'Life Satisfaction' by LSOA in the First ONS Annual Experimental Subjective Wellbeing survey, April 2011 - March 2012
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Percentage of persons aged 15 years and over by level of life satisfaction, by gender, for Canada, regions and provinces.
Percentage of persons aged 15 years and over by level of life satisfaction, by gender, for Canada, regions and provinces.