institute for transport studies faculty of environment wellbeing, quality of life and transport...

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School of something FACULTY OF OTHER Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon [email protected] ITS Research Seminar, 24 February 2015

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Page 1: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

Institute for Transport StudiesFACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT

Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy

Louise Reardon

[email protected]

ITS Research Seminar, 24 February 2015

Page 2: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

Overview

• Wellbeing and Quality of Life have become more explicit goals of government activity

• Presentation divided into three sections

• Discussion of the rise of the ‘wellbeing agenda’ (Bache and Reardon 2013)

• Wellbeing and transport: current knowledge and potential (Reardon and Abdallah 2013)

• Lessons from ‘Quality of Life’ in transport policy (Reardon 2014)

Page 3: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

The Wellbeing Agenda

• Focus on GDP leads to unacceptable and sub-optimal outcomes

• Increased confidence in subjective wellbeing measures – self report surveys

• International initiatives• European Commission: ‘GDP and Beyond’ (2007)

• OECD: Better Life Index (2011)

• Stiglitz-Sen-Fitoussi Commission (2009)

Page 4: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

The Wellbeing Agenda

Stiglitz-Sen-Fitoussi Commission

• Shifting emphasis from measurement of economic output to wellbeing

• Measuring both objective and subjective dimensions of wellbeing

• Develop a dashboard of sustainability indicators

• Promote national level focus on wellbeing

Page 5: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

David Cameron:

“From April next year we will start measuring our progress as a country not just by how our economy is growing, but by how our lives are improving, not just by our standard of living, but by our quality of life.” Speech announcing the Measuring National Wellbeing Programme 25 November 2010

The Wellbeing Agenda

Page 6: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

The Wellbeing Agenda

• Goal of creating an ‘accepted and trusted’ set of national statisticshttp://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/HTMLDocs/dvc146/wrapper.html

• Three stated uses of wellbeing data• Overall monitoring of wellbeing

• International comparison

• Policy making process

• UK application of wellbeing tentative

Page 7: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

Wellbeing and Transport

Nef (2008) Dynamic Model of Wellbeing

Page 8: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

Wellbeing and Transport

Transport’s affect on four ‘systems’

• Economic – improvements to transport infrastructure

• Environmental – air pollution, noise pollution, road accidents

• Social – social inclusion, fostering social capital, social exclusion

• Individual – physical activity, psychological response to travel

Page 9: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

Wellbeing and Transport

• Research is rather disparate, not only across ‘system’ area, but also space, time, cohort, and research method used

• Subjective wellbeing indicators are not used that readily to understand impacts

• Stanley et al (2011) the ‘value’ of extra trip

• Stutzer and Frey (2010) challenges assumptions about commuter trade-offs

Page 10: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

QoL and Transport

Delivering a Sustainable Transport System• Support economic competitiveness and growth

• Reduce carbon dioxide emissions

• Contribute to better safety, security and health

• Promote greater equality of opportunity

• To improve quality of life for transport and non-transport users – the ‘quality of life goal’

Page 11: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

QoL and Transport

Sheffield City Region (SCR)

• Area lagging behind national average on several economic indicators

• LTP had four goals

• Support economic growth

• Enhance social inclusion and health

• Reduce emissions from vehicles

• Maximise safety of the transport network

Page 12: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

QoL and Transport

Sheffield City Region

• No operational definition of quality of life

• Referred to in numerous ways

• Quality of life implementation group

• Largely a rhetorical shift

Page 13: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

QoL and Transport

“I think it [quality of life] was a catch all phrase at the end of the day, to cover a lot of things that didn’t necessarily fit in with everything else.”

“It [quality of life] sort of grows, there’s never one specific definition.”

Page 14: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

QoL and Transport

City of York

• Out performs national average on several economic indicators

• LTP3 had five goals

• Provide quality alternatives (to the car)

• Provide strategic links

• Implement and support behaviour change

• Tackle transport emissions

• Improve public streets and spaces

Page 15: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

QoL and Transport

City of York

• Quality of life identified closely with quality of place

• Improving public streets and spaces

• Enhancing character of spaces and streets

• Reducing vehicle intrusion in the city

• Improve the environment for walking and cycling in residential areas

Page 16: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

QoL and Transport

Why the variation?

• National level very hands-off

• Local level recognised need to keep national government on side – follow signals

• Local context key

• Governance structure had no real effect

• QoL prevalent if tied to economic growth – a higher priority

Page 17: Institute for Transport Studies FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Transport Policy Louise Reardon l.reardon@leeds.ac.uk ITS Research

Conclusion

…Tying these three areas together

• Wellbeing is a potentially important agenda

• Wellbeing evidence challenges assumptions

• Need to be clear what we mean by wellbeing

• Increase the evidence base

• Does wellbeing have the potential to resonate within the transport sector?