Are Collective Efficacy, Disorder and Social Support Associated with One’s Quality of Life? Evidence from the Multilevel SWING Study in Belgium
Wim Hardyns (),
Veerle Vyncke,
Arne Boeck,
Lieven Pauwels and
Sara Willems
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Wim Hardyns: Ghent University
Veerle Vyncke: Ghent University
Arne Boeck: University of Leuven
Lieven Pauwels: Ghent University
Sara Willems: Ghent University
Applied Research in Quality of Life, 2016, vol. 11, issue 3, No 6, 739-756
Abstract:
Abstract The current study assesses the evidence for the association between several neighborhood social processes (collective efficacy and social disorder) and two important individual-level quality of life indicators, which are avoidance behaviour and mental health. In addition to these neighborhood characteristics, the study also assesses the impact of an individual’s social support network on these two outcomes. Hypotheses are derived from a theoretical framework that integrates insights from social capital theory, collective efficacy theory and broken windows theory. Hypotheses about both neighborhood- and individual-level effects are tested by applying multilevel analyses to data from the ‘Social capital and Well-being In Neighborhoods in Ghent’ (SWING) survey of 2011, which consists of face-to-face interviews among the adult population in the second largest municipality of Belgium. Results suggest that individuals living in neighborhoods with lower levels of social trust and higher levels of disorder report more avoidance behaviour. Neighborhood effects on mental health are rather negligible. Individuals who experience more social support report both a better mental health and fewer avoidance behaviour.
Keywords: Neighborhood; Quality of life; Subjective well-being; Social capital; Collective efficacy; Avoidance behaviour; Mental health; Multilevel (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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DOI: 10.1007/s11482-015-9393-z
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