Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Friday, October 29 2021 - 22:00
AsiaNet
Baylor and Harvard Researchers Partner in Long-Term, Global Study of Human Flourishing
WACO, Texas, Oct. 29, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

-- Researchers at Harvard University and Baylor University launch the largest 
initiative of its kind to investigate the determinants of human flourishing.

-- "The Global Flourishing Study" is a $43.4 million, five-year annual study of 
240,000 individuals in 22 countries across a broad range of well-being outcomes.

Social and biomedical scientists at Harvard University and Baylor University 
have joined forces to launch the largest initiative of its kind to investigate 
the factors that influence human flourishing. This $43.4 million initiative -- 
"The Global Flourishing Study" (GFS) -- will involve a five-year study of 
240,000 individuals, representing 22 countries globally, with annual data 
collection across a broad range of well-being outcomes. This effort includes 
the data collection and management expertise of Gallup and the stakeholder 
coordination and open science leadership of the Center for Open Science. 

Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1672165/GFS_baylor_University.jpg

What does it mean to live well? To be truly healthy? To thrive? Researchers and 
clinicians have typically answered these questions by focusing on the presence 
or absence of various pathologies: disease, family dysfunction, mental illness, 
or criminal behavior. But such a "deficits" approach tells only so much about 
what makes for a life well-lived -- about what it means to flourish. 

"The Global Flourishing Study is exactly the type of work needed to deeply 
understand the interplay of key elements in human experience that help us live 
well, be happy, and experience a sense of meaning and purpose," said project 
co-director Dr. Tyler VanderWeele, the John L. Loeb and Frances Lehman Loeb 
Professor of Epidemiology and Director of the Human Flourishing Program ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3336874-2&h=2437702370&u=https%3A%2F%2Fhfh.fas.harvard.edu%2F&a=Human+Flourishing+Program 
) at Harvard, who has published important articles on the assessment of human 
flourishing in leading scientific journals such as JAMA and the Proceedings of 
the National Academy of Sciences. "The longitudinal research design will allow 
us to substantially advance scientific knowledge on the determinants of human 
flourishing." 

Project director Dr. Byron Johnson, Distinguished Professor of the Social 
Sciences and Director of the Institute for Studies of Religion ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3336874-2&h=2669445051&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.baylorisr.org%2F&a=Institute+for+Studies+of+Religion 
) at Baylor, also commented on the data's significance for better understanding 
the role of religion in a global context: "It's an extraordinary opportunity 
for the Baylor-Harvard team to lead a panel study like this. Because our sample 
size is so large, we will be able to examine all of the world's great religions 
and the role, if any, that they play in human flourishing."

The panel will include individuals from Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Egypt, 
Germany, India, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Nigeria, the 
Philippines, Poland, Russia, Turkey, South Africa, Spain, Tanzania, Ukraine, 
the United Kingdom, and the United States. 

Over the next five-plus years, the team will analyze longitudinal data on the 
patterns, determinants, and social, psychological, spiritual, political, 
economic, and health-related constituents and causes of human flourishing. 
"There are several examples of probability-based, nationally representative 
studies that track the same respondents over time in a single country," 
explained Dr. Rajesh Srinivasan, Global Research Director of the Gallup World 
Poll, "but few have attempted to cover multiple countries. The scope of this 
project is unprecedented and likely to yield valuable insights for global 
survey research using this type of methodology." 

Questionnaire design underwent extensive development and feedback, including 
months of work on question refinement, translation, cognitive testing, and 
piloting. That work is summarized in a detailed report from Gallup ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3336874-2&h=2747720768&u=https%3A%2F%2Fhfh.fas.harvard.edu%2Ffiles%2Fpik%2Ffiles%2Fglobalflourishingstudy_report.pdf&a=detailed+report+from+Gallup 
). 

The research team will partner with the Center for Open Science to make the 
data from the Global Flourishing Study an open-access resource so researchers, 
journalists, policymakers, and educators worldwide can probe detailed 
information about what makes for a flourishing life. Dr. David Mellor, Director 
of Policy from the Center for Open Science, commented, "The rigor and 
transparency applied to its analysis will increase trust in the research that 
comes from this work, and will lower barriers to worldwide, equitable access to 
this information. We couldn't be more pleased to partner with these teams to 
support this process." 

Overall, the goal is to build a mature field of study around the science of 
human flourishing, producing research findings that will influence the 
direction of social and health policy. As Gallup's CEO Jim Clifton remarked, 
"The Global Flourishing Study is a methodological innovation that can truly 
change the world -- truly change how the world is led." VanderWeele echoed 
these sentiments: "This is a tremendous opportunity. We are so excited to see 
what we, and other researchers around the globe, will learn."

Given its scope, joint support from a consortium of funders was needed to make 
the Global Flourishing Study financially viable, including support from the 
John Templeton Foundation, the Templeton Religion Trust, the Templeton World 
Charity Foundation, the Fetzer Institute, the Paul Foster Family Foundation, 
the Wellbeing for Planet Earth Foundation, Well Being Trust, and the David & 
Carol Myers Foundation. 

Along with Johnson and VanderWeele, members of the Baylor-Harvard team include 
Drs. Matt Bradshaw, Merve Balkaya-Ince, Brendan Case, Ying Chen, Alex Fogleman, 
Sung Joon Jang, Philip Jenkins, Thomas Kidd, Matthew T. Lee, Jeff Levin, Tim 
Lomas, Katelyn Long, Van Pham, Sarah Schnitker, John Ssozi, Robert Woodberry, 
and George Yancey.

About Baylor's Institute for Studies of Religion

Launched in 2004, Baylor's Institute for Studies of Religion ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3336874-2&h=2669445051&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.baylorisr.org%2F&a=Institute+for+Studies+of+Religion 
) (ISR) initiates, supports, and conducts research on religion, involving 
scholars and projects spanning the intellectual spectrum: history, psychology, 
sociology, economics, anthropology, political science, philosophy, 
epidemiology, theology, and religious studies. Our mandate extends to all 
religions, everywhere, and throughout history, and embraces the study of 
religious effects on prosocial behavior, family life, population health, 
economic development, and social conflict. While always striving for 
appropriate scientific objectivity, our scholars treat religion with the 
respect sacred matters require and deserve.

About Harvard's Human Flourishing Program

Founded in 2016, the Human Flourishing Program ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3336874-2&h=2437702370&u=https%3A%2F%2Fhfh.fas.harvard.edu%2F&a=Human+Flourishing+Program 
) at Harvard's Institute for Quantitative Social Science aims to study and 
promote human flourishing, and to develop systematic approaches to the 
synthesis of knowledge across disciplines. The program's research contributes 
to the broad question of how knowledge from the quantitative social sciences 
can be integrated with that of the humanities on questions of human flourishing 
and how best to carry out this synthesis of knowledge across disciplines. The 
program hopes to bring greater unity to the empirical social sciences and the 
humanities. The program produces research publications and sponsors educational 
activities, such as courses, seminars, and conferences, for the Harvard 
University community all aimed at bringing knowledge together across 
disciplines and reflecting upon how knowledge from different disciplines might 
form a coherent whole.

About Gallup

Gallup ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3336874-2&h=4209608532&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gallup.com%2Fanalytics%2Fhome.aspx&a=Gallup 
) is a global analytics and advice firm with more than 80 years of experience 
measuring public opinion and human development. In the organization's own 
research and in working partnerships with government, nonprofit and 
philanthropic organizations, Gallup develops indicators to measure key global 
development and social responsibility indicators over time. 

About the Center for Open Science

Founded in 2013, COS is a nonprofit culture change organization with a mission 
to increase openness, integrity, and reproducibility of scientific research. 
COS pursues this mission by building communities around open science practices, 
supporting metascience research, and developing and maintaining free, open 
source software tools, including the Open Science Framework (OSF) ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3336874-2&h=1357543093&u=https%3A%2F%2Fosf.io%2F&a=Open+Science+Framework%C2%A0(OSF 
). Learn more at cos.io ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3336874-2&h=1276205086&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cos.io%2F&a=cos.io 
).

Contact: Alex Fogleman, Ph.D., GFS Project Manager, Institute for Studies of 
Religion, Baylor University, Alex_Fogleman@baylor.edu

SOURCE Baylor University
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