Measuring well-being: trial of the neighbourhood thriving scale for social well-being among pro-social individuals

Baldwin, C., Vincent, P., Anderson, J. and Rawstorne, P. (2020) Measuring well-being: trial of the neighbourhood thriving scale for social well-being among pro-social individuals. International Journal of Community Well-Being, 3, pp. 361-390. (doi: 10.1007/s42413-020-00067-6) (PMCID:PMC7286207)

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Abstract

We report on a trial of the neighbourhood thriving framework (NTF), a conceptual framework from psychology and social science for measuring collective subjective social well-being. It combines the notions of feeling good and functioning effectively in a neighbourhood social environment in an indicator set of 15 conceptual dimensions. An online questionnaire was used to measure neighbourhood thriving (NT) among 212 pro-social volunteers involved in revitalising neighbourhoods in the UK city of Stoke-on-Trent between May and October 2018. Exploratory factor analysis revealed 11 factors that made conceptual sense including three social epidemiological pathways to well-being, networks, participation and pro-social behaviours, and four criteria for flourishing societies, autonomous citizenship, safety, cohesive communities and resilience. The 11 sub-scales of NT showed satisfactory internal consistency reliability and preliminary evidence of construct validity. The sub-scales were used tentatively to examine NT among the volunteer sample, which showed the highest sub-scale score for Positive Regard and the lowest score for Celebration. Different levels of NT were observed among the community, with age and income positively associated with higher levels of NT. Further validation work is needed before the NT scales can be used with confidence. Validated scales offer potential benefits including: measuring NT pre- and -post project implementation; establishing which dimensions of NT are, and are not, working well in a community and need strengthening through further initiatives, and establishing which specific groups of people are experiencing lower levels of NT and designing projects that meet their needs.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Baldwin, Dr Catherine
Authors: Baldwin, C., Vincent, P., Anderson, J., and Rawstorne, P.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > Social Scientists working in Health and Wellbeing
Journal Name:International Journal of Community Well-Being
Publisher:Springer
ISSN:2524-5295
ISSN (Online):2524-5309
Published Online:10 June 2020
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2020 The Authors
First Published:First published in International Journal of Community Well-Being 3:361–390
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence

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