The new millennium is widely considered to be the age of globalisation,
democratisation, and human rights. We live in a knowledge society and in
a time of risk and uncertainty. It is the interplay of these key trends
of the era that call for a fresh approach to quality of life studies to
inform policy makers and development practitioners. This book addresses
the key challenges life research that relate to the characteristics of
the new millennium such as increased risks, rapid worldwide
democratisation of societies, loss of bio- and cultural diversity, rapid
erosion of natural resources and climate change, and global connectivity
that accelerates the transmission of disease as well as knowledge.
Quality of life (QOL) research has made great strides since the social
indicator movement started as a scientific enterprise in the 1960s.
Researchers from many different scientific disciplines are now engaged
in describing and evaluating the human condition in many different parts
of the world. Although QOL researchers are better equipped both
theoretically and practically than in the past, the new era poses new
challenges for them. One such challenge relates to the very definition
of the subject under study. The notion of the good life that has
intrigued classical Greek is fluid and popular conceptions of the good
life have shifted over time. The speed with which societies worldwide
are changing in the new millennium is breathtaking. It is possible that
the vision of the good life has shifted dramatically over the forty
years since the social indicator movement began.
Democracy is currently the political system of choice in the new
millennium or is at least considered the best possible system of
governance invented to date. The emergent democracies in the Second and
Third World have joined the ranks of the older democracies of the First
World. One of the important roles of QOL researchers is to engage
citizens in assessing their life circumstances relative to their own
conception of the good life.
Quality of life studies play an important role in guiding social policy.
In democracies citizens are able to hold their governments accountable
for pursuing the policies and making the interventions that will make
the greatest improvements for the greatest number. There are moral and
political issues related to the proper role of governments in providing
the good life and public goods. This volume addresses the issue of how
governments should intervene to shape the good life for their citizens.
This is a pertinent question for quality-of-life scholars in all corners
of the earth in the new millennium.