This study explores the social construction of agency and wellbeing among 20 Chinese urban retirees aged between 50 and 82 years old (averaging 67), with a special focus on the impact of earlier life experiences in shaping later-life pathways. Today\u27s retirees in urban China have experienced the communist collectivist ideology during the Mao era as well as the changes to everyday life brought about by the economic transformation from centrally planned socialism to a market-orientated economy. Thereby, life in retirement for Chinese elders becomes more than just an issue of dealing with increases in discretionary time after exit from full-time work, but also one of making sense of their earlier life experiences in the midst of dramatic so...
Purposes: Responding to the growing needs of the largest aging population in the world, China has be...
This book presents a pioneering ethnographic exploration of practices and ideologies of eldercare in...
The first part of the book is entitled ‘Family, Transitions and Aging’ and addresses rapid social an...
As an ageing society going through dramatic economic and political transitions, the care of older pe...
This study examined perspectives of recent retirees in Shenzhen and Hong Kong on how retirement infl...
While Western discourses regarding productive aging emphasize individuals' contributions to economic...
This study shows the Western theorization and interpretation of aging, place and health are not well...
Ageing in place has become a primary policy instrument around the world to tackle the challenges ass...
Longer life expectancy means that chronological age is no longer a useful indicator of defining old ...
China’s ageing process is accelerating as the large birth cohorts of the 1950s and 1960s enter their...
Background: The life course experiences of those born in China from the late 1950s to early 1970s ha...
In recent decades, an estimated 100 million middle-aged and elderly Chinese women have organized or ...
Thematic area: Unpaid carersOBJECTIVE: Participation in productive activities in late-life is known ...
Age identity has long been considered a more meaningful and accurate reflection of the aging process...
Based on in-depth semi-structured interviews with older women and men in two cities in mainland Chin...
Purposes: Responding to the growing needs of the largest aging population in the world, China has be...
This book presents a pioneering ethnographic exploration of practices and ideologies of eldercare in...
The first part of the book is entitled ‘Family, Transitions and Aging’ and addresses rapid social an...
As an ageing society going through dramatic economic and political transitions, the care of older pe...
This study examined perspectives of recent retirees in Shenzhen and Hong Kong on how retirement infl...
While Western discourses regarding productive aging emphasize individuals' contributions to economic...
This study shows the Western theorization and interpretation of aging, place and health are not well...
Ageing in place has become a primary policy instrument around the world to tackle the challenges ass...
Longer life expectancy means that chronological age is no longer a useful indicator of defining old ...
China’s ageing process is accelerating as the large birth cohorts of the 1950s and 1960s enter their...
Background: The life course experiences of those born in China from the late 1950s to early 1970s ha...
In recent decades, an estimated 100 million middle-aged and elderly Chinese women have organized or ...
Thematic area: Unpaid carersOBJECTIVE: Participation in productive activities in late-life is known ...
Age identity has long been considered a more meaningful and accurate reflection of the aging process...
Based on in-depth semi-structured interviews with older women and men in two cities in mainland Chin...
Purposes: Responding to the growing needs of the largest aging population in the world, China has be...
This book presents a pioneering ethnographic exploration of practices and ideologies of eldercare in...
The first part of the book is entitled ‘Family, Transitions and Aging’ and addresses rapid social an...