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Meaning and Perceptions of the Good Life in Ghana

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Abstract

This experimental study extends the geographical focus of empirical investigations of what makes life good to Ghana, West Africa. Data were collected from a sample of 189 Ghanaian college students (19–49 years old). A 2 (income: high vs. low) × 2 (happiness: high vs. low) × 2 (meaning: high vs. low) experimental design was used to investigate factors related to judgements about the good life. Multivariate analysis of variance was used to test the study’s hypotheses. The results highlighted that similar to previous research, concepts of happiness and meaning are central to the conceptualization of the good life in Ghana. Unlike previous studies however, quality of life, desirability, and perception of the good life were not significantly intercorrelated. The findings suggest that while some factors may consistently predict the good life across diverse cultural settings, complementary consideration of culturally constructed meaning systems may be warranted.

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Notes

  1. Purpose was assessed in the context of liking what one did every day, and social well-being was operationally defined as the presence in one’s life of love and supportive relationships. The survey defined Financial well-being as economic security (not being worried about money in the last seven days, and having enough money to meet one’s financial goals); community security as liking, having pride in, and feeling safe in one’s residential community, and physical well-being as a self-reported assessment of one’s physical health and energy levels).

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Correspondence to Vivian A. Dzokoto.

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Dzokoto, V.A., Osei-Tutu, A., Scollon, C.N. et al. Meaning and Perceptions of the Good Life in Ghana. Psychol Stud 64, 11–20 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12646-018-0475-5

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