Transforming Well-Being in Wuppertal—Conditions and Constraints
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Transdisciplinary Research
2.2. Transformative Science
2.3. Local Sustainability Transition
2.4. Real-World Laboratories and Action Research
2.5. Well-Being Transformation
3. Case, Research Design, Methods and Data
3.1. Wuppertal and Selected City Districts
3.2. Transformative Research Design
- (1)
- Conceptualisation and measurement of the new well-being by developing an indicator system. It is intended to measure overall progress or regress in different well-being dimensions. By providing dimensions and numbers, we expect that the indicator system also supports the mind shift of local politicians and citizens from economic growth to sustainable well-being when it comes to promoting certain policies (Appendix A).
- (2)
- To facilitate the use of the well-being concept and indicator system by politicians and citizens, we promote the indicator system as a management tool to estimate the contribution of different municipal and civil society projects to local well-being ([89], Appendix B).
- (3)
- To spread the extended understanding of well-being among citizens and to gain data on subjective well-being of Wuppertal’s citizens in different places and situations, the research team cooperates with the Happiness Research Organisation in developing and applying the mobile phone app “Happy Wuppertal” ([90,91], Appendix C).
- (4)
- To network Wuppertal’s civil society initiatives that contribute to well-being, we mapped these civil society initiatives and surveyed their stated problems as well as contributions to the well-being dimension. To make this knowledge available, the research team joined forces with other local mapping initiatives and a group of ‘hacktivists’ to set up a transdisciplinary process of developing a suitable public online platform (Appendix D).
- (5)
- To research and support local well-being transformation in different dimensions in detail, we established three real-world laboratories (RWLs) in the city areas mentioned above. The Oberbarmen & Wichlinghausen RWL focuses on vacant apartments in this area and aims to create solutions to care for them with the help of tenants who pay below standard but maintain the facility (Haushüten). The Arrenberg RWL focuses on the Essbarer Arrenberg (Edible Arrenberg) group, a subgroup of Aufbruch am Arrenberg (Arrenberg Starts Out), a young civil society organisation aiming to achieve a climate-neutral urban district. Essbarer Arrenberg promotes sustainable, local nutrition for the Arrenberg district through urban farming, food-sharing and restaurant days. The researcher inter alia supports the development of a local nutrition strategy. In the Mirke RWL, a forum that aims to integrate all relevant civil and municipal stakeholders of district development for the purpose of local well-being transformation is supported (Forum:Mirke) and the inhabitants’ self-efficacy is researched. We also made steps to evaluate the RWLs contributions to the well-being dimensions (Appendix E).
- (6)
- Finally, we research several cross-cutting issues on a meta-level, reflecting the research approaches we use and the roles we take as scientists in this transformative research project, inter alia. The present article is part of this cross-cutting research and focuses only the conditions and constraints of transforming well-being in Wuppertal and most particularly of the roles of scientists in this endeavour. Here, we focus on the causally more distant framework conditions to the outcome of well-being transformation, which we are already able to identify. Regarding the RWLs, this research is comparative in nature, for there are several comparable components, like characteristics of city districts and research phases, which may help to understand which conditions and constraints interact with each other. A facilitating condition might lose relevance or become a constraint in a different context and vice versa and if a condition seems to be relevant in all three cases, one could conclude tentatively that this one might be also important in other cases with similar contexts.
3.3. Methods and Data
4. Interim Results
4.1. Conceptualising, Measuring and Transforming Well-Being in Wuppertal
4.2. Framework Conditions of Transforming Well-Being in Wuppertal
4.2.1. Contexts
4.2.2. Staff, Resources and Processes
RWL Oberbarmen & Wichlinghausen
RWL Arrenberg
RWL Mirke
4.2.3. Normativity
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Conceptualisation and Measurement of New Well-Being Dimensions and Indicators
Appendix A.1. Survey of Well-Being Perceptions
- Income
- Education
- Work place
- Housing condition
- Personal security/protection against crime
- Health
- Civic engagement
- Community
- Environmental quality
- Local public transport
- Pedestrians
- Bicycle routes
- Parking slots and streets
- Green areas, forests
- Accessible culture and leisure programme
- Integration of immigrants
- Shopping facilities and local supply in the neighbourhood
- No disadvantages of certain living areas
- Public squares and spaces
- Personal life satisfaction
- Other (with the possibility to name and rate another issue).
- Income, job
- Housing condition
- Education
- Security/protection against crime
- Health
- Civic engagement
- Community
- Environmental quality
- Infrastructure
- Culture and leisure opportunities
- Personal life satisfaction.
Random Sample | 1000 |
Not-Deliverable | 23 |
Adjusted Sample | 977 |
Online Returns | 124 |
Paper-and-Pencil Returns | 48 |
Total Returns | 172 |
Effective Return Rate | 17.6% |
Appendix A.2. Indicator Development
Appendix B. Facilitation of the Use of the Indicator System by Politicians and Citizens
Dimension | Description | Question |
---|---|---|
Income | Income including all additional benefits available to the Wuppertal population. | Does the project create the opportunity for people in Wuppertal to increase their income, e.g., by promoting the economy? |
Job | The availability of good and secure jobs and measures of the 2nd labour market. | Does the project create new or better jobs, e.g., as part of 2nd labour market measures? |
Living Environment | Sufficiently large apartments in good condition at affordable prices in a good residential environment. | Does your project improve the living situation in Wuppertal, e. g. by upgrading vacant buildings? |
Infrastructure | Municipal infrastructure such as public transport, roads, pedestrian and cycle paths as well as local supply (local shopping facilities). | Does your project improve the urban infrastructure or supply of people in a short distance to the place of residence? |
Security | Refers to crime rates, accident probability and prevention work as well as to places that give rise to fear and sense of security in Wuppertal. | Does your project increase safety in Wuppertal, e.g., by defusing fears or preventing accidents? |
Education | Refers to both school education (school-leaving certificates) and further education, workshops and training opportunities. | Does your project create new opportunities for inhabitants of Wuppertal to educate themselves? |
Leisure and Culture | Good offers and barrier-free access to leisure activities such as art and culture and the time to use them (offers, distance to the place of residence, costs). | Does your project create new offers that can be used in leisure time? |
Environmental Quality | A clean environment in the city with fresh air, clean water and parks. Air and water quality in Wuppertal as well as noise pollution, green areas, environmental protection projects and land use. | Does your project improve the environmental quality in Wuppertal, e.g., air, water or green spaces? |
Health | A long, healthy life and the prerequisites for it, such as good medical care. Life expectancy, state of health as well as health-promoting offers and surroundings (nutrition, exercise, educational work). | Does your project contribute to a better health and a longer life for the people of Wuppertal? |
Civic Engagement | The possibilities of the people in Wuppertal to shape their city, e.g., in voluntary work, in elections or through citizen participation. | Is it possible for people in Wuppertal to improve their city through their project, e.g., in their own projects or through participation in city projects? |
Community | Personal social relationships, support for/by friends and relatives, as well as public spaces, networking and social commitment such as neighbourly help. | Does your project bring the people in Wuppertal closer together? |
Life Satisfaction | General personal satisfaction with life and the neighbourhood, the district and the city. This also includes identification with the district and the city. | Does your project make more people in Wuppertal happy or satisfied? |
Appendix C. Mobile Phone App “Happy Wuppertal”
Appendix D. Mapping of Wuppertal’s Civil Society Organisations
Appendix E. Real-World Laboratories in Three Districts of Wuppertal
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Contexts | City and districts (challenges, actors, projects, narratives), institutions |
Staff & Resources | Roles, expertise, motivation/openness, funding |
Processes | Time frames, discourse arenas, co-design, co-production |
Normativity | Goal of well-being transformation |
Characteristics | Wuppertal | Oberbar. & Wichlingh. | Arrenberg | Mirke |
---|---|---|---|---|
Staff, Resources & Process | ||||
Type of practice partner | municipal & ‘hacktivists’ | semi-public quart. dev. | green-business | green-alternative |
Process & roles over time | emerging | inconsistent | inconsistent | consistent |
District Characteristics | ||||
Population numbers | 355,000 | 33,000 | 5400 | 8100 |
Migration background | ↑ 35% | 46% | 52% | 53% |
Unemployment rate | ↓ 9.6% | 14.6% | 9% | 13.3% |
Identities & narratives | negative image, left behind | on the upswing, “We are the makers” | district in the making, multi-cultural |
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Rose, M.; Schleicher, K.; Maibaum, K. Transforming Well-Being in Wuppertal—Conditions and Constraints. Sustainability 2017, 9, 2375. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9122375
Rose M, Schleicher K, Maibaum K. Transforming Well-Being in Wuppertal—Conditions and Constraints. Sustainability. 2017; 9(12):2375. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9122375
Chicago/Turabian StyleRose, Michael, Katharina Schleicher, and Katrin Maibaum. 2017. "Transforming Well-Being in Wuppertal—Conditions and Constraints" Sustainability 9, no. 12: 2375. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9122375
APA StyleRose, M., Schleicher, K., & Maibaum, K. (2017). Transforming Well-Being in Wuppertal—Conditions and Constraints. Sustainability, 9(12), 2375. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9122375