Abstract

With the recent establishment of linkages between characteristics of the community and subjective well-being of residents by a sociologist, the ability to design and monitor urban development that enables human and environmental well-being becomes necessary. Developing communities sustainably require resilient economic, environmental, social and governance systems. This study assesses community happiness based on perceived satisfaction of sustainable development interventions in urban areas. A sample of 400 residents was selected to complete the self-reported survey on specific items on a 10-point response scale (1 means “very dissatisfied” and 10 means “very satisfied”). The sample comprised of residents between 18 years of age and above who lived and works in the town, outside and identified with the communities in the city. The results show that the environmental well-being (M=7.69, SD=1.59), social well-being (M=6.96, SD=1.73), and urban governance (M=6.69, SD=1.61), and economic well-being (M=6.19, SD=2.01) respectively were positively perceived to contribute to the overall community happiness (M=6.88). The findings suggest that investments unto the dimensions could lead to a more optimistic outlook for sustainable community future. The study contributed to the literature on the connection between subjective well-being and sustainable development, and also the measure of community happiness in local context using subjective approach, particularly in Malaysia.

Highlights

  • Urban environment including the large cities is assuming increasing importance in global environmental health concern due to rapid urbanization (Zanuzdana, Khan, & Kraemer, 2013)

  • The dimensions of community well-being which were rated most positively and promote community well-being in Putrajaya are environmental, social, urban governance and economic respectively

  • The analysis has demonstrated that the link between sustainable development and well-being does hold for individuals but scales to the level of communities to aggregate happiness out of community residents’ self-reported satisfaction of social, economic, environmental and urban governance well-being of communities

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Summary

Introduction

Urban environment including the large cities is assuming increasing importance in global environmental health concern due to rapid urbanization (Zanuzdana, Khan, & Kraemer, 2013). More than 3.4 billion people around the world live in urban areas and cities, with expected 6.3 billion increase by the year 2050 (United Nations, 2013). This is an indication that the world will depend on urban environments to meet their social, economic and housing needs. Rapid urbanization in many developing countries transforming production capacities, income levels and living standard or quality of life, with ample pressure on the cities and the supporting ecological systems (Costanza et al, 2014).

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