In this post, I have organized all resources related to the publication by Appiah and Billen (2024) Evaluating the Good Lives Model among Students: The Role of Primary Goods and Self-regulation in Achieving a Good Life published in the Journal of Forensic Psychology Research and Practice. In that paper, we hypothesised that individuals prioritising their goals are more likely to achieve them and engage in less antisocial behaviour than those who do not prioritise them. We expected self-regulation to moderate this relationship. The results indicated that while conscientiousness strengthened this association, urgency, on the other hand, weakened it.
Publication
Click here to get access to the full open-access article

Blog Post
I have reviewed the article in this blog post here

Also, I share 6 valuable lessons I learnt from the project to help others in this blog post here.

Data Sharing
You can access the data file, pre-registration, materials, ethical approval and analysis script needed for replication and reproduction here at the Open Science Framework (OSF).

How to Cite Original Article
Appiah, O. K., & Billen, E. (2024). Evaluating the Good Lives Model Among Students: The Role of Primary Goods and Self-Regulation in Achieving a Good Life. Journal of Forensic Psychology Research and Practice. https://doi.org/10.1080/24732850.2024.2394528


