Perceiving societal pressure to be happy is linked to poor well-being, especially in happy nations

Egon DEJONCKHEERE*, Joshua J. RHEE, Peter K. BAGUMA, Oumar BARRY, Maja BECKER, Michał BILEWICZ, Thomas CASTELAIN, Giulio COSTANTINI, Girts DIMDINS, Agustín ESPINOSA, Gillian FINCHILESCU, Malte FRIESE, Maria Cecilia GASTARDO-CONACO, Ángel GÓMEZ, Roberto GONZÁLEZ, Nobuhiko GOTO, Peter HALAMA, Camilo HURTADO-PARRADO, Gabriela M. JIGA-BOY, Johannes A. KARLLindsay NOVAK, Liisi AUSMEES, Steve LOUGHNAN, Khairul A. MASTOR, Neil MCLATCHIE, Ike E. ONYISHI, Muhammad RIZWAN, Mark SCHALLER, Eleonora SERAFIMOVSKA, Eunkook M. SUH, William B. SWANN, Eddie M.W. TONG, Ana TORRES, Rhiannon N. TURNER, Alexander VINOGRADOV, Zhechen WANG, Victoria Wai-lan YEUNG, Catherine E. AMIOT, Watcharaporn BOONYASIRIWAT, Müjde PEKER, Paul A.M. VAN LANGE, Christin Melanie VAUCLAIR, Peter KUPPENS, Brock BASTIAN

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal PublicationsJournal Article (refereed)peer-review

13 Citations (Scopus)

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Psychology