Environmentally Efficient Well-Being: Rethinking Sustainability as the Relationship between Human Well-being and Environmental Impacts

The question of how to measure sustainability remains vexing. We approach the problem by noting that most theories of environmental impact assume that exploitation of the environment provides benefits to human well-being. However, this assumption has not been subject to much empirical discipline. We...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inHuman ecology review Vol. 16; no. 1; pp. 114 - 123
Main Authors Dietz, Thomas, Rosa, Eugene A., York, Richard
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Society for Human Ecology 01.07.2009
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1074-4827
2204-0919

Cover

Loading…
Abstract The question of how to measure sustainability remains vexing. We approach the problem by noting that most theories of environmental impact assume that exploitation of the environment provides benefits to human well-being. However, this assumption has not been subject to much empirical discipline. We propose a model of Efficient Well-Being (EWEB) inspired by the Stochastic Frontier Production Models commonly used in economics. EWEB assesses a nation-state's efficiency in enhancing human well-being through the use of economic, natural and human resources. This approach shifts attention from the elusive question of whether a nation is sustainable to the more tractable question of how efficient a nation is in producing human well-being. We model human well-being as a function of physical, natural and human capital. In a preliminary test of this approach here we operationalize human well-being as life expectancy, flows of physical capital as gross domestic product per capita, flows of natural capital as the ecological footprint, and human capital as education. Using data from 135 nations, we find that controlling for physical and human capital, exploitation of the environment has no net effect on well-being. This suggests that improvements in well-being may be attainable without adverse effects on the environment. We also find that many nations could substantially improve their efficiency in using human and natural resources to generate well-being.
AbstractList The question of how to measure sustainability remains vexing. We approach the problem by noting that most theories of environmental impact assume that exploitation of the environment provides benefits to human well-being. However, this assumption has not been subject to much empirical discipline. We propose a model of Efficient Weil-Being (EWEB) inspired by the Stochastic Frontier Production Models commonly used in economics. EWEB assesses a nation-states efficiency in enhancing human well-being through the use of economic, natural and human resources. This approach shifts attention from the elusive question of whether a nation is sustainable to the more tractable question of how efficient a nation is in producing human well-being. We model human well-being as a function of physical, natural and human capital. In a preliminary test of this approach here we operationalize human well-being as life expectancy, flows of physical capital as gross domestic product per capita, flows of natural capital as the ecological footprint, and human capital as education. Using data from 135 nations, we find that controlling for physical and human capital, exploitation of the environment has no net effect on well-being. This suggests that improvements in well-being may be attainable without adverse effects on the environment. We also find that many nations could substantially improve their efficiency in using human and natural resources to generate well-being. Adapted from the source document.
The question of how to measure sustainability remains vexing. We approach the problem by noting that most theories of environmental impact assume that exploitation of the environment provides benefits to human well-being. However, this assumption has not been subject to much empirical discipline. We propose a model of Efficient Well-Being (EWEB) inspired by the Stochastic Frontier Production Models commonly used in economics. EWEB assesses a nation-state's efficiency in enhancing human well-being through the use of economic, natural and human resources. This approach shifts attention from the elusive question of whether a nation is sustainable to the more tractable question of how efficient a nation is in producing human well-being. We model human well-being as a function of physical, natural and human capital. In a preliminary test of this approach here we operationalize human well-being as life expectancy, flows of physical capital as gross domestic product per capita, flows of natural capital as the ecological footprint, and human capital as education. Using data from 135 nations, we find that controlling for physical and human capital, exploitation of the environment has no net effect on well-being. This suggests that improvements in well-being may be attainable without adverse effects on the environment. We also find that many nations could substantially improve their efficiency in using human and natural resources to generate well-being.
Author York, Richard
Dietz, Thomas
Rosa, Eugene A.
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Thomas
  surname: Dietz
  fullname: Dietz, Thomas
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Eugene A.
  surname: Rosa
  fullname: Rosa, Eugene A.
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Richard
  surname: York
  fullname: York, Richard
BookMark eNpVj01Lw0AQhhepYFv9CcKevAU2-5HdeNNSbaEg-IHHMEln7dZkE7MbpX_A322kXjzNDDw87zszMvGtxxMy5ZzJhOVpPiHTlGmZSMP1GZmFsGdMCSbSKfle-k_Xt75BH6GuD3RpravceNFXrOvkFp1_u6aPGHfOv487fRpCBOehdLWLBwqBxh2OQA3RtT7sXEdLjF-Inq6GBvzRU_56KPgt_RdI100HVQzn5NRCHfDib87Jy93yebFKNg_368XNJtmnwsTEWGat4jmvMFXGGg3SZIaBVqiAiVIyZbeSCaHHf_NSAmY5U7mVVWUEbrmYk6ujt-vbjwFDLBoXqrEgeGyHUGRpZqRI1QheHsF9iG1fdL1roD8UXGqmteTiByGBbRo
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright Society for Human Ecology
Copyright_xml – notice: Society for Human Ecology
DBID 7U4
BHHNA
DWI
WZK
DatabaseName Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
Sociological Abstracts
Sociological Abstracts
Sociological Abstracts (Ovid)
DatabaseTitle Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
Sociological Abstracts
DatabaseTitleList Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)

DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Anthropology
EISSN 2204-0919
EndPage 123
ExternalDocumentID 24707742
GroupedDBID 29I
2WC
42X
4P2
5GY
AAEFR
AAFWJ
ABBHK
ABPVG
ABXSQ
ACHQT
ACPRK
ADULT
AEKFB
AEUPB
AFPKN
AFRAH
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
E3Z
EDH
FRJ
FRP
GROUPED_DOAJ
IZHOT
JAAYA
JENOY
JFNAL
JKQEH
JLEZI
JLXEF
JPL
JST
M2S
OK1
P2P
SA0
SWMRO
7U4
BHHNA
DWI
WZK
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-j138t-8f0ff5292ce158f87a48680a75e5a03b405fd403371079b4ae69059f4cc83ed23
IEDL.DBID JFNAL
ISSN 1074-4827
IngestDate Fri Jul 11 01:37:36 EDT 2025
Thu Jul 03 21:29:39 EDT 2025
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 1
Language English
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-j138t-8f0ff5292ce158f87a48680a75e5a03b405fd403371079b4ae69059f4cc83ed23
Notes ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
PQID 61684315
PQPubID 23497
PageCount 10
ParticipantIDs proquest_miscellaneous_61684315
jstor_primary_24707742
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 20090701
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2009-07-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 07
  year: 2009
  text: 20090701
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 2000
PublicationTitle Human ecology review
PublicationYear 2009
Publisher Society for Human Ecology
Publisher_xml – name: Society for Human Ecology
SSID ssj0053031
Score 2.2708914
Snippet The question of how to measure sustainability remains vexing. We approach the problem by noting that most theories of environmental impact assume that...
SourceID proquest
jstor
SourceType Aggregation Database
Publisher
StartPage 114
SubjectTerms Ecological footprint
Ecological sustainability
Efficiency
Environmental conservation
Human ecology
Humans
Renewable energy
Special Section on Human/Environment Relationships
Sustainability assessments
Sustainable Development
Sustainable economies
Sustainable global economy
Well Being
Wellbeing
Title Environmentally Efficient Well-Being: Rethinking Sustainability as the Relationship between Human Well-being and Environmental Impacts
URI https://www.jstor.org/stable/24707742
https://www.proquest.com/docview/61684315
Volume 16
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwdV3JTsMwELVQe0FIiK2irD5wjUiceAm3glqVCnoAKnqLnNgWoCitSHroD_DdjJ2ERYhjDnYkTzTvOfNmHkIXjCvBifK9OMs4XFCsG2AaRZ7IgCMxRZnmthv5fsrGs2gyp_NGRFM2skqnC3RVfCBIaa4vScR9oCmQabvEWpJ0UHcymg7u2pRLIQ8HrbjQzrVsxYV_EqxDjdEO2m7oHh7U8dlFG7rYQ1s_3AnW--hj-N1sJvN8jYdurAM84Wed5961Bni5wg_W6d4ZHeDHtuvJClvXWJYYaBz-0rW9vC5xo7_C7id9vU9q98GyUPjXC_Gta5QsD9BsNHy6GXuNPYL3FoSi8oTxjaEkJpkOqDCCy0gw4UtONZV-mAIVMyrywxBIBIcASA03YRqbKMtEqBUJe6hTLAp9iDBgOgCZgEXAR4wxMdWMKqLSUMpAM9FHPXeeybIegZG0Eemj8_aAE_gubbFBFnqxKhMWMAHkhB79t_QYbdaVGSt9PUGd6n2lTwHgq_SsCe8nJKSpEQ
linkProvider JSTOR
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwdV3JTsMwELVQewAhIbaKstUHrhHZvIRbQa1KaXuAVvQWObEtQFFakfbQH-C7GTsJixDHHGxLnnjes-fNDEJXlEnOfOk6UZoyuKCYboBJGDo8BY5EJaGKmWzk8YQOZuFwTuaViKaoZJVWF2ij-ECQkkxd-yFzgaaAp22SMPDh_DWH_Ul3VLtcAn7Yq8WFpq5lLS7842AtavT30V5F93C3tM8B2lL5Idr90Z1gc4Q-et_JZiLLNrhnyzrAF35WWebcKoCXG_xoOt3bRgf4qc56MsLWDRYFBhqHv3RtL69LXOmvsH2kL-dJzDxY5BL_WhDf20TJ4hjN-r3p3cCp2iM4b17AVw7XrtbEj_xUeYRrzkTIKXcFI4oIN0iAimkZukEAJIKBAYSCmzCJdJimPFDSD1qokS9ydYIwYDoAGYdBwEe01hFRlEhfJoEQnqK8jVp2P-NlWQIjri3SRp16g2P4L02wQeRqsS5i6lEO5ISc_je0g7YH0_EoHt1PHs7QThmlMTLYc9RYva_VBYD9KrmsTP0JK8yr-A
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwdV3LSsNAFB2kBRFBfBXrq7NwG5rXPOKuakNbaxG12F2YZGZQCWkx7aI_4Hd7Jw8fiMssZgJzw71ncs-5B6ELyiRnrrStIEkYXFCMG2Ds-xZPACNRSahiRo18N6GDqT-akVk1LDqvaJUFL7Do4gNAilPVXUjddX1mA1SBbNs08m3SQM1ROOmN67RLIBc7NcHQzLasCYZ_kmxROcJdtFNBPtwrY7SHNlS2j7Z_OBSsD9BH_1twJtJ0jfvFaAd4ws8qTa0rBSXmEj8Yt_vC7AA_1sonQ25dY5FjgHL4i9v28rrAFQcLFz_qy31isw8WmcS_XoiHhVgyP0TTsP90PbAqiwTrzfH40uLa1pq4gZsoh3DNmfA55bZgRBFhezHAMS192_MASDAIglBwGyaB9pOEe0q6Xgs1snmmjhCGug7FjMMiwCRa64AoSqQrY08IR1HeRq3iPKNFOQYjqiPSRp36gCP4Nk3DQWRqvsoj6lBuYnX839IO2ry_CaPxcHJ7grbKRo1hwp6ixvJ9pc6g3i_j8yrSn75IrQw
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Environmentally+Efficient+Well-Being%3A+Rethinking+Sustainability+as+the+Relationship+between+Human+Well-being+and+Environmental+Impacts&rft.jtitle=Human+ecology+review&rft.au=Dietz%2C+Thomas&rft.au=Rosa%2C+Eugene+A.&rft.au=York%2C+Richard&rft.date=2009-07-01&rft.pub=Society+for+Human+Ecology&rft.issn=1074-4827&rft.eissn=2204-0919&rft.volume=16&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=114&rft.epage=123&rft.externalDocID=24707742
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1074-4827&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1074-4827&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1074-4827&client=summon