Wellness without fairness: The missing link in psychology

To promote human welfare, psychologists must advance two important goals: wellness and fairness. Hitherto, research on wellness or well-being has discovered connections among overall satisfaction with life and important facets of life, such as relationships, income, and physical health, but the conn...

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Main Author: Prilleltensky, Issac
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20236
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author Prilleltensky, Issac
author_facet Prilleltensky, Issac
author_sort Prilleltensky, Issac
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description To promote human welfare, psychologists must advance two important goals: wellness and fairness. Hitherto, research on wellness or well-being has discovered connections among overall satisfaction with life and important facets of life, such as relationships, income, and physical health, but the connections among various types of wellness and specific aspects of fairness remain obscure. Research on justice in psychology, in turn, has focused largely on the impact of distributive, procedural, and interactional justice on job performance and not so much on wellness outcomes. I argue that psychologists must explore in depth the association among various types of wellness, such as interpersonal, occupational, physical, and psychological, and diverse kinds of fairness, such as distributive, procedural, interpersonal, cultural, developmental, retributive, and intrapersonal. The pursuit of wellness without fairness will not yield the outcomes individuals and communities need. We must make more explicit the relationship between justice or injustice and flourishing in life.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-202362017-09-13T13:48:57Z Wellness without fairness: The missing link in psychology Prilleltensky, Issac To promote human welfare, psychologists must advance two important goals: wellness and fairness. Hitherto, research on wellness or well-being has discovered connections among overall satisfaction with life and important facets of life, such as relationships, income, and physical health, but the connections among various types of wellness and specific aspects of fairness remain obscure. Research on justice in psychology, in turn, has focused largely on the impact of distributive, procedural, and interactional justice on job performance and not so much on wellness outcomes. I argue that psychologists must explore in depth the association among various types of wellness, such as interpersonal, occupational, physical, and psychological, and diverse kinds of fairness, such as distributive, procedural, interpersonal, cultural, developmental, retributive, and intrapersonal. The pursuit of wellness without fairness will not yield the outcomes individuals and communities need. We must make more explicit the relationship between justice or injustice and flourishing in life. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20236 10.1177/0081246313484238 unknown
spellingShingle Prilleltensky, Issac
Wellness without fairness: The missing link in psychology
title Wellness without fairness: The missing link in psychology
title_full Wellness without fairness: The missing link in psychology
title_fullStr Wellness without fairness: The missing link in psychology
title_full_unstemmed Wellness without fairness: The missing link in psychology
title_short Wellness without fairness: The missing link in psychology
title_sort wellness without fairness: the missing link in psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20236