Love you
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Love you

Public policy for intergenerational wellbeing
Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar I
ISBN-13:
9780473557904
Veröffentl:
2021
Seiten:
208
Autor:
Girol Karacaoglu
eBook Typ:
EPUB
eBook Format:
Reflowable
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

How would we design, implement and evaluate public policy if it were based on our love for future generations? For the philosopher Walter Kaufman, 'I love you' means:'I want you to live the life that you want to live. I will be as happy as you if you do; and as unhappy as you if you don't.'We have no idea what future generations will value and how they will want to live. Nor do we wish to prescribe how they choose to live, so long as they do not prevent others from living the lives they value.We want to prepare and look after the 'wellbeing garden' - the broader ecosystems - that will provide them with the opportunities and capacity to survive and thrive, to flourish in safety. As another philosopher, Walter Benjamin, put it, 'We want to liberate the future from its deformation in the present.'Wellbeing is about the ability of individuals and communities to live the lives they value - now and in the future. This is their human right. It would be unjust to prevent the enjoyment of lives centred on chosen values. Preventing such injustice across generations should be the primary focus of a public policy that has intergenerational wellbeing as its objective.This book examines the processes by which wellbeing-focused public policy objectives are established, prioritised, funded, implemented, managed, and evaluated, while ensuring that they remain relevant as social preferences change over time.

How would we design, implement and evaluate public policy if it were based on our love for future generations? For the philosopher Walter Kaufman, 'I love you' means:


'I want you to live the life that you want to live. I will be as happy as you if you do; and as unhappy as you if you don't.'


We have no idea what future generations will value and how they will want to live. Nor do we wish to prescribe how they choose to live, so long as they do not prevent others from living the lives they value.


We want to prepare and look after the 'wellbeing garden' - the broader ecosystems - that will provide them with the opportunities and capacity to survive and thrive, to flourish in safety. As another philosopher, Walter Benjamin, put it, 'We want to liberate the future from its deformation in the present.'


Wellbeing is about the ability of individuals and communities to live the lives they value - now and in the future. This is their human right. It would be unjust to prevent the enjoyment of lives centred on chosen values. Preventing such injustice across generations should be the primary focus of a public policy that has intergenerational wellbeing as its objective.


This book examines the processes by which wellbeing-focused public policy objectives are established, prioritised, funded, implemented, managed, and evaluated, while ensuring that they remain relevant as social preferences change over time.

Foreword

Preface

1. Introduction

2. Wellbeing and a radically different policy approach

3. Public policy in a radically different world

4. Resilience as a platform for sustained prosperity

5. Governing for intergenerational wellbeing

6. Inclusive processes required for sustained wellbeing

7. How do we know if wellbeing policy is effective?

8. What would I prioritise and why?

9. Living well - circular wellbeing

10. Epilogue: Covid-19 - wellbeing-focused policy response

Appendix 1: Evidence - institutions and wellbeing

Appendix 2: Evidence - broader impacts of opportunity on wellbeing

References

About the author 

The Nest Collective 

About Tuwhiri 

Notes

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