This book provides a critical reflection on theory, welfare and aging. An examination on how aging appears to be moving from individualization to a globalized world is provided. This is particularly apparent in a move toward neo-liberal discourses of consumerism which artificially appears to indicate a reallocation of attention from responding to welfare problems such as ‘abuse’, for example to an attempt to define what it is to allegedly ‘age positively’ in an era were older people have never had it so good. This trend is happening in western culture and greatly reconstructs both the formal expectations and personal experiences of later life less in terms of welfare but more in terms of leisure. The book is written against the backdrop of ...
The elderly are currently becoming one of the subjects of a global culture. As a consequence of a su...
Later years are changing under the impact of demographic, social and cultural shifts. No longer conf...
This article is not available through ChesterRep.This article locates an understanding of comparativ...
This book aims to provide a critical reflection on existing episetemplogies of aging and alternative...
Social Welfare, Aging, and Social Theory explores how we can understand the changing relationship be...
This special issue of the Canadian Journal of Sociology is on social theory and aging in a global wo...
Aging and globalization: without doubt, these are among the primary processes of transformation in t...
This article is a critique of the successful aging (SA) paradigm as described in the Rowe and Kahn b...
About the book: Why do we need to know about adult lives? As western industrialised societies exper...
The discourse of positive aging has become the central plank upon which international and national a...
Viewing aging and identity through the critical lens of both contemporary gerontology theory and pos...
The purpose of this paper is to contextualise the need for a social theory of ageing. For a long tim...
Sociologists Georg Simmel and Max Weber conceived the idea of lifestyle to identify the social conne...
Efforts at cumulative knowledge building in social gerontology have been lax, judging from research ...
Efforts at cumulative knowledge building in social gerontology have been lax, judging from research ...
The elderly are currently becoming one of the subjects of a global culture. As a consequence of a su...
Later years are changing under the impact of demographic, social and cultural shifts. No longer conf...
This article is not available through ChesterRep.This article locates an understanding of comparativ...
This book aims to provide a critical reflection on existing episetemplogies of aging and alternative...
Social Welfare, Aging, and Social Theory explores how we can understand the changing relationship be...
This special issue of the Canadian Journal of Sociology is on social theory and aging in a global wo...
Aging and globalization: without doubt, these are among the primary processes of transformation in t...
This article is a critique of the successful aging (SA) paradigm as described in the Rowe and Kahn b...
About the book: Why do we need to know about adult lives? As western industrialised societies exper...
The discourse of positive aging has become the central plank upon which international and national a...
Viewing aging and identity through the critical lens of both contemporary gerontology theory and pos...
The purpose of this paper is to contextualise the need for a social theory of ageing. For a long tim...
Sociologists Georg Simmel and Max Weber conceived the idea of lifestyle to identify the social conne...
Efforts at cumulative knowledge building in social gerontology have been lax, judging from research ...
Efforts at cumulative knowledge building in social gerontology have been lax, judging from research ...
The elderly are currently becoming one of the subjects of a global culture. As a consequence of a su...
Later years are changing under the impact of demographic, social and cultural shifts. No longer conf...
This article is not available through ChesterRep.This article locates an understanding of comparativ...