Repository logo

Bonheur et politique : une étude comparée des provinces canadiennes


Thèse ou mémoire / Thesis or Dissertation
Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Contributor(s)

Advisor(s)

Published in

Conference Date

Conference Place

Publisher

Degree Level

Maîtrise / Master's

Affiliation

Keywords

  • Satisfaction face à la vie
  • Bien-être subjectif
  • Subjective well-being
  • Canadian politic
  • Quebec politic
  • Social policies
  • Welfare state
  • Union
  • Bonheur
  • Politique canadienne
  • Politique québécoise
  • Politiques sociales
  • État-providence
  • Syndicat
  • Satisfaction with life
  • Happiness

Funding organization(s)

Abstract

Ce mémoire s’inscrit dans la continuité des études sur le bonheur et tente d’expliquer les écarts de satisfaction face à la vie au Canada. Depuis 1985, le niveau de bien-être exprimé des Québécois s’est considérablement accru en comparaison aux autres provinces canadiennes. Des raisons politiques justifient une part des écarts provinciaux, tout comme la hausse observée au Québec. La gauche politique s’avère favorable à la poursuite du bonheur général. La portée de l’État-providence, le degré de réglementation économique et la force du mouvement syndical permettent d’expliquer, dans une certaine mesure, les écarts de satisfaction face à la vie au sein de la fédération canadienne. Le modèle social québécois distinct du reste du Canada semble avoir plutôt bien répondu face aux bouleversements des dernières décennies.


This paper builds on happiness studies, and strives to explain the disparities of life satisfaction levels between Canadians. Since 1985, the well-being level expressed by Quebecers has risen considerably more than in other Canadian provinces. Political factors partly explain these provincial gaps, as well as the growth observed in Quebec. Left-wing politics positively affect the overall pursuit of happiness. The reach of the welfare state, the degree of economic regulations and the strength of labour unions movements explain, to some extent, the gap between life satisfaction levels amongst the Canadian federation. The Quebec model, distinct from the rest of Canada, has dealt rather well with the shifts of the previous decades.

Table of contents

Notes

Notes

Other language versions

Related research dataset(s)

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

This document disseminated on Papyrus is the exclusive property of the copyright holders and is protected by the Copyright Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42). Unless the document is published under a Creative Commons licence, it may be used for fair dealing and non-commercial purposes, for private study or research, criticism and review as provided by law. For any other use, written authorization from the copyright holders is required.