1. The Well-being transition, a look behind and ahead.- 2. Capitalism and well-being.- 3. From Climate science to climate justice.- 4. Inclusive prosperity in the 21st century.- 5. Global and national lessons from 25 years of promoting sustainable development.- 6. Health and the environment, an overview.- 7. Environmental inequalities: from modelling to policy.- 8. Integrating health, the environment and inequality into policy.- 9. Cities and well-being: framework and case studies.- 10. Well-being and trust.- 11. Redefining collective well-being.- 12. The Green Deal and the reform of the European semester.- 13. Toward a well-being Europe.- 14. Integrating environmental indicators into EU policy.- 15. Essential well-being in time of crises.
Éloi Laurent is a Senior Research Fellow at OFCE (Sciences Po Centre for Economic Research, Paris), Professor at the Sciences Po School of Management and Innovation and Ponts ParisTech, and Visiting Professor at Stanford University.
The purpose of this volume, bringing together key actors of the well-being community, including scholars and policy-makers, is to advance the understanding and undertaking of the well-being transition away from growth and toward resilience and sustainability, at a time when this progress has become a vital necessity. A decade after the publication of the Stiglitz Report (2009), alternative visions to GDP and growth, that flourished in the 1970s, have re-emerged from all corners of the world, at all levels of governance. Yet, GDP and growth remain very much dominant in defining public policies, influencing businesses and shaping imaginaries.
This book moves forward on two urgent tasks that stand before us in order to make progress in the well-being transition: first, connecting well-being to sustainability in a consistent framework highlighting their complementarity, using health as a pivot; second, operationalizing well-being indicators, i.e. integrating them into policy at all levels of governance.— Éloi Laurent is a Senior Research Fellow at OFCE (Sciences Po Centre for Economic Research, Paris), Professor at the Sciences Po School of Management and Innovation and Ponts ParisTech, and Visiting Professor at Stanford University.