Measuring what matters A wellbeing economics approach to urban marginality in high-income contexts
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| Award date | 02-06-2026 |
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| Number of pages | 201 |
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| Abstract |
This
dissertation explores urban marginality in affluent cities, focusing on
marginalized neighbourhoods in Amsterdam where economic growth coexists with
deep social and spatial inequalities. It asks how citizen-defined indicators of
wellbeing can be developed and measured at neighbourhood level, and how such participatory
wellbeing measurement can empower residents and inform more inclusive urban
governance. The research draws on
wellbeing economics, conceptualizing wellbeing as the interaction between material,
relational, and subjective dimensions of life, and integrates this with participatory
governance theory and urban regime theory. It takes an
action-oriented and community-based participatory research approach that
combines qualitative and quantitative methods, experiential
and statistical data, and multiple forms of expertise. |
| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Language | English |
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