At Harvard Kennedy School conference, experts ask serious questions about the public value of happiness

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At Harvard Kennedy School conference, experts ask serious questions about the public value of happiness

#At Harvard Kennedy School conference, experts ask serious questions about the public value of happiness | 来源: 网络整理| 查看: 265

Q: Why is it important that the Kennedy School and the Center for Public Leadership host this type of event?

The objective of the Leadership & Happiness Laboratory is not to embark on new research. That work is deeply important, but that demand is being supplied by hundreds of academic departments around the world. There is a distinct market gap in our happiness space: Where can leaders learn the science so as to apply it in their lives? For their constituents? For their companies? For their families? A place like that did not exist before the Leadership & Happiness Laboratory. At this symposium (our first) we began the conversation on how leaders can learn and teach this material, so that it can spread far and wide across our society and culture. That is, after all, what the Kennedy School and the Center for Public Leadership strive to do: Provide our leaders with the tools to improve communities, countries, and, indeed, the world. In that vein, there was no better place to host this symposium.

Q: How does happiness fit in at a public policy school? Is it something like a soft skill that can be taught? Is it something that can be woven into other disciplines?

I get this question a lot. At first glance, it might seem strange that happiness science can fit into a rigorous public policy school. But if we dig a little deeper, studying the bedrock principles of happiness—enjoyment (something much deeper than pleasure), satisfaction (the joy from accomplishing something you worked for) and meaning (understanding your direction in life and your significance in the world)—these principles underpin and help solve the questions of policymakers. How do we combat the loneliness epidemic? What would it take to decrease deaths of despair or society’s suicidal ideation rate? Why does social media pose a particular risk for our teens? How can we strengthen communities? How can individuals put a plug in political polarization?

The happiness science provides deep-seated answers to these terribly tricky questions. And in this way, it is something that can be taught to people who care about progress, and it is certainly something that can, and should, be interdisciplinary. The science of happiness is, in the end, the science of human behavior and principles for improving our lives. Any age-old public policy question oscillates around these points.

The final note of the Leadership & Happiness Symposium was undeniably optimistic. In a world full of crisis and tragedy, there are science-backed solutions to finding the good life and serious leaders that are taking the best of what doctors, scientists, and philosophers have already figured out and applying it to the pursuit of happiness. The symposium showed that there is not only a demand for more happiness in our society, but a new generation of leaders rising to answer the call.

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Photos by Ansel Dickey, Vermont Social



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