Skip to content
Research Development, Science

Study explores if sustainable development research is really focused on well-being

Charles Darwin University 3 mins read

The success of the United Nations’ global sustainability targets is often measured through economic growth – but what about how people feel and live?  

A new study led by Charles Darwin University (CDU) has examined whether human wellbeing — life satisfaction, happiness, quality of life, and living standards — is being sufficiently integrated into the global development agenda.

The paper is the first to examine how wellbeing aligns with the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

While well-being is specifically represented in SDG Goal 3, Good Health and Wellbeing, the state of being comfortable, healthy or happy extends across all goals.  

The study reviewed research from around the world between 2007 and 2024 which focused on wellbeing in relation to the MDGs and SDGs.  

Lead author and CDU Associate Lecturer in Business and Economics Dr Mohammad Rajib Hasan said while wellbeing is widely acknowledged, it remained unevenly explored, with most research focused on wealthier nations and limited representation from developing and Indigenous communities.

“Wellbeing lies at the heart of the global sustainability challenge,” Dr Hasan said.

“It goes beyond health or income—it’s about how people feel about their lives, their sense of security, opportunity, and purpose. Yet, much of global progress is still assessed through GDP and economic output, not human fulfilment.”

“The problem is that wellbeing research and policy are still dominated by high-income countries. The voices and lived experiences of people in the Global South, Indigenous, and remote communities remain largely absent. This gap exists partly because of underinvestment in social science research and the high cost of large-scale surveys capturing people’s real experiences.”

The review shows a strong, positive connection between wellbeing and health (SDG Goal 3), education (SDG Goal 4), environmental quality (SDG Goal 13), and governance (SDG Goal 16).

It also found there to be short-term trade-offs between wellbeing and other goals such as responsible consumption (SDG 12) and climate action (SDG 13), where lifestyle or economic changes may initially reduce life satisfaction.  

Education was also identified as a central bridge between sustainability and wellbeing.

Dr Hasan said the findings underscore the need to place people’s wellbeing at the center of development efforts, and that policymakers should begin to measure wellbeing alongside economic indicators.

“Economic growth without wellbeing is hollow. Sustainability must be judged by its capacity to expand people’s freedoms, improve their quality of life, and make them happier, not only by environmental or fiscal targets,” Dr Hasan said.

“Governments should design development strategies that are not only economically sustainable but also socially equitable and culturally meaningful. That ensures the goals of sustainable development truly benefit all people, not just those in developed regions.”

The study was conducted alongside Griffith University Professor of Econometrics Eliyathamby A Selvanathan, and from CDU Lecturer in Business and Economics Dr Bhanu Bhatia, Professor of Marketing Steven Greenland, and Professor of Economics Maneka Jayasinge.  

Well-Being and Sustainable Development: A Systematic Review and Avenues for Future Research was published in the journal Sustainable Development.  


Contact details:

Sierra Haigh she/her
Communications Officer
 
Marketing, Media & Communications
Larrakia Country
E: [email protected]
W: cdu.edu.au

 
CDU logo
 
Charles Darwin University acknowledges all First Nations people across the lands on which we live and work, and we pay our respects to Elders both past and present.
CRICOS Provider No. 00300K | RTO Provider No. 0373 | TEQSA Provider ID PRV12069

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 02/03/2026
  • 06:02
The Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand

Women in respiratory leadership take centre stage at TSANZSRS 2026

Key Facts: The TSANZ Symposium on women in respiratory leadership, hosted by The Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand and exclusively sponsored by Chiesi Australia, will be held in Perth in March 2026, featuring leaders from Australia, New Zealand, and the USA. The event will explore leadership paths, representation and barriers affecting career progression in respiratory medicine, with Professor Cecilia Prêle chairing the panel. Distinguished speakers include Associate Professor Lida Hariri from Harvard, Professor Natasha Smallwood (TSANZ President), and Karen Collishaw (American Thoracic Society CEO). While women make up 74% of Australia's health workforce and 46% of TSANZ members,…

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 27/02/2026
  • 14:36
The Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand

Future respiratory workforce in focus: TSANZSRS ASM 2026 Postgraduate Workshops

Key Facts: Full-day postgraduate and advanced trainee workshops scheduled for 27 March 2026 at Perth Convention Centre, focusing on strengthening respiratory workforce capabilitiesProgramme includes comprehensive sessions on Interstitial Lung Disease, Bronchiectasis, and Pulmonary embolism management, featuring multidisciplinary approaches and expert-led discussionsMorning workshops cover lung nodule management, occupational lung diseases, professional development, and tuberculosis updatesAfternoon sessions focus on complex symptom management, including exercise-induced breathlessness and chronic breathlessness management masterclassesProgramme emphasises practical skills, clinical decision-making, and mentoring opportunities between senior clinicians and emerging respiratory specialistsPerth, March 2026 – Strengthening the future respiratory workforce will be a central focus of the TSANZSRS Annual…

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 27/02/2026
  • 09:13
Centenary Institute

Emerging class of antibiotics to tackle global tuberculosis crisis

Researchers from the University of Sydney and the Centenary Institute have discovered how a promising class of experimental antibiotics disrupts the bacterium that causes…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.