Publication | Closed Access
The relationship between sense of community and subjective well-being: A first look
348
Citations
20
References
1991
Year
Quality Of LifeCommunity PerceptionSocial PsychologyMental HealthTelephone InterviewsPsychologySocial SciencesWell-being (Positive Psychology)Psychological Well-beingSocial IdentityPsychiatryEmotional Well-beingCommunity EngagementFirst LookApplied Social PsychologyElderly WellbeingSouth CarolinaCommunity ParticipationLife SatisfactionCommunity ScaleCommunity DevelopmentSubjective Well-beingSociologyCommunity StudiesMedicine
The relationship between sense of community and subjective well-being (SWB) was tested by conducting telephone interviews with three random samples in South Carolina and Alabama (ns = 151, 399, and 442). Respondents answered the 17-item Sense of Community Scale (Davidson & Cotter, 1986), a measure of three facets of SWB (happiness, worrying, and personal coping), and questions about their demographic characteristics and subjective evaluations of their community. Partial correlation coefficients were computed between sense of community and SWB, partialling out the influence of demographic and community-evaluation variables. Sense of community was significantly related to SWB in all three samples. The effects were especially pronounced for the happiness facet of SWB. Implications are drawn for theory and intervention, and recommendations are made for further research.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1