Sociologie Românească (Jan 2011)

Social Identifications with Big Groups and Communities and Subjective Well-being in Poland

  • Katarzyna Hamer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1

Abstract

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Socialties are known to have strong influence on well-being, but in the studies in this scientific context they are usually operationalized as close relationships. The author wanted to check if social identifications with very big groups and communities e.g. citizens of a province, a nation, citizens of Europe or a religious group, are also linked to happiness and life satisfaction. On the basis of big opinion polls from years 1995–2005 (Polish General Social Surveys) and another opinion poll from 2009, the connection between wide social identifications and subjective well-being was probed. Analyses confirmed the hypothesis that social identifications with big groups or communities are connected to subjective well-being, both in an emotional aspect, like happiness or a positive affect, as well as in a cognitive one, like satisfaction in different domains of life. The results of the first study indicate that subjects identifying themselves on low level with Poland, Europe, region, and non-believers were the least satisfied in different domains. Also people highly identifying themselves with Poland and Europe had stronger feeling of happiness than people with weaker identifications. The results from the second study indicate that stronger social identifications (local, national, European and religious) were connected with more positive affect. Also, all of them except EU identification were connected with stronger domain satisfactions. The results are discussed in relationships with the Terror Management Theory, with support potentially acquired from social identifications and with specificity of religion prescriptions on desirable emotions.

Keywords