Demographic Aspects of Human Wellbeing
11-12 November
Wittgenstein Centre, Vienna
Next to this open call for papers and posters we are happy to announce as keynote speakers:
A third keynote speaker shall be announced soon.
The scientific literature addressing human wellbeing is
rapidly expanding in economics, psychology, sociology, and the health sciences,
and is also becoming increasingly important in interdisciplinary studies of
sustainable development. A large number of wellbeing indicators have been
proposed in order to quantitatively capture and monitor progress towards better
human wellbeing and study its determinants. Many of these indicators have
demographic components such as life expectancy or studies explicitly address
age- and gender-specific differentials in economic standing, life satisfaction,
health/disability or consider other demographic differentials.
Researchers at the Wittgenstein Centre are currently
involved in several studies around economic and health aspects of human
wellbeing and an ERC Advanced Grant on “The demography of sustainable human
wellbeing”. In this context and with partial funding from this grant the
conference wants to bring together researchers from around the world working on
different aspects of human wellbeing with a specifically demographic
perspective. The aim is to put demography more prominently on the table as a
discipline that has much to contribute to the scientific study of human
wellbeing, both in terms of its measurement and the analysis of its
determinants.
Examples of topics include:
- Life expectancy based indicators of wellbeing
- Wellbeing over the life course and over time
- Applying demographic metabolism model to forecast wellbeing along cohort lines
- Demographic differentials/inequalities in wellbeing
- What matters more for wellbeing: age or gender, education or income?
- Wellbeing and intergenerational support
- Feedbacks from environmental change to human wellbeing
Deadline for sending abstracts for contributed papers or posters is 1 June 2019.
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