Well-being policy evaluation methodology based on WE pluralism
Takeshi Kato

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel policy evaluation methodology based on WE pluralism, emphasizing subjective well-being, stakeholder diversity, and joint fact-finding to better assess policies for a well-being society.
Contribution
It develops a new policy evaluation approach integrating WE pluralism and joint fact-finding, bridging philosophical theory and practical policy assessment.
Findings
Formulated dependence of well-being on narrow-wide WE
Defined a set of policies for each WE level and their mappings
Presented a combined policy-making and impact evaluation method
Abstract
Methodologies for evaluating and selecting policies that contribute to the well-being of diverse populations need clarification. To bridge the gap between objective indicators and policies related to well-being, this study shifts from constitutive pluralism based on objective indicators to conceptual pluralism that emphasizes subjective context, develops from subject-object pluralism through individual-group pluralism to WE pluralism, and presents a new policy evaluation method that combines joint fact-finding based on policy plurality. First, to evaluate policies involving diverse stakeholders, I develop from individual subjectivity-objectivity to individual subjectivity and group intersubjectivity, and then move to a narrow-wide WE pluralism in the gradation of I-family-community-municipality-nation-world. Additionally, by referring to some functional forms of well-being, I formulate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction · Qualitative Comparative Analysis Research · Environmental Education and Sustainability
