News — According to the World Happiness Report, the people in Finland are the happiest in the world -- the seventh year running that the country has topped this subjective well-being ranking. Experts from Finland's Aalto University are available to comment on what happiness means in this context and how this small country ensures its residents’ well-being. Aalto’s experts can talk about how good governance and urban planning contribute to the country’s happiness: 

  • Measuring and maintaining well-being in a society of trust. University lecturer Frank Martela, an expert on the basis of Finland’s happiness, has talked about and how this can help national governments and institutions guide their policies to make people healthy and happy.
  • Urban planning that makes people feel healthy and safe. Professor Marketta Kyttä can discuss .

 

Frank Martela is a philosopher and researcher of psychology specialized in meaningfulness, happiness, and how organizations and countries can unleash human potential. His book A Wonderful Life – Insights on Finding a Meaningful Experience (HarperCollins 2020) has been translated into 24 languages, including French, Spanish, German, Japanese, Korean, and Indonesian.

Martela has become one of the key experts on why Finland is so happy. He has written about the topic for Scientific American Observer and co-authored a chapter on the Nordic countries for the 2020 Word Happiness Report. Martela has been interviewed by The New York Times, Vice Â鶹´«Ã½, Le Monde, and the Monocle Observer. He earned his first PhD in organizational research (Aalto University, 2012) and his second PhD in practical philosophy (University of Helsinki, 2019). 

Email: [email protected]
Phone: +358505707916

 

Marketta Kyttä, professor of land use planning, studies child- and human-friendly environments, environments that promote wellbeing and health, urban lifestyles, perceived safety, as well as new methods for public participation. Her multidisciplinary research team is currently focused on the place-based, person-environment research with public participation, using geographic information system methodology. The team has also worked on numerous real-life public participation projects in Finnish cities and abroad.

Email: [email protected]
Phone: +358505124583

 

Information about the publication of this year’s report is available on the .