Age studies scholars have long noted problems with using a tsunami metaphor to describe population ageing. Age-friendly offers a new way to respond to an increase in older adults. Though critical gerontologists identify the related movement’s limits, “age-friendly” itself is rarely recognized as a metaphor. This paper proposes that, while the metaphor of age-friendly is more benign than that of the tsunami, it still portrays an ageing population as a homogenous problem to be solved through morally obligatory individual actions, thereby participating in a form of age panic. The analysis draws on a humanities-based close reading of the World Health Organization’s 2007 “Global Age-Friendly Cities: A Guide.” The method uncovers attitudes that a...
The ageing of the Australian population is often portrayed as a problem rather than an opportunity. ...
The goal of this commentary is to highlight the ageism that has emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic...
Ideas relating to ‘successful’ and ‘active’ ageing have become firmly embedded in research and polic...
“Active ageing” has internationally circulated as a prominent approach to meeting the challenges of ...
Old age has many images, with the one of a crisis regaining momentum. While images of activity and o...
At the beginning of the 21st century, the new mantra—“successful ” and “resourceful ” aging—is used ...
PURPOSE: The purpose of this paper is to highlight the stigma surrounding old age, which in many way...
The goal of this commentary is to highlight the ageism that has emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic...
COVID-19 is the greatest global crisis since WW11, infecting millions of people. Those amongst the w...
Problem: As aging and urbanization trends converge, developing “age-friendly community initiatives” ...
The \u27ageing crisis\u27 is founded on three main assumptions: that older people are a social and e...
In communicating chronic risks, there is increasing use of a metaphor that can be termed ‘effective-...
Sustainable development is challenged by the exponential growth of the older population, which threa...
During the COVID-19 pandemic, we face an exacerbation of ageism as well as a flourish of intergenera...
Sustainable development is challenged by the exponential growth of the older population, which threa...
The ageing of the Australian population is often portrayed as a problem rather than an opportunity. ...
The goal of this commentary is to highlight the ageism that has emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic...
Ideas relating to ‘successful’ and ‘active’ ageing have become firmly embedded in research and polic...
“Active ageing” has internationally circulated as a prominent approach to meeting the challenges of ...
Old age has many images, with the one of a crisis regaining momentum. While images of activity and o...
At the beginning of the 21st century, the new mantra—“successful ” and “resourceful ” aging—is used ...
PURPOSE: The purpose of this paper is to highlight the stigma surrounding old age, which in many way...
The goal of this commentary is to highlight the ageism that has emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic...
COVID-19 is the greatest global crisis since WW11, infecting millions of people. Those amongst the w...
Problem: As aging and urbanization trends converge, developing “age-friendly community initiatives” ...
The \u27ageing crisis\u27 is founded on three main assumptions: that older people are a social and e...
In communicating chronic risks, there is increasing use of a metaphor that can be termed ‘effective-...
Sustainable development is challenged by the exponential growth of the older population, which threa...
During the COVID-19 pandemic, we face an exacerbation of ageism as well as a flourish of intergenera...
Sustainable development is challenged by the exponential growth of the older population, which threa...
The ageing of the Australian population is often portrayed as a problem rather than an opportunity. ...
The goal of this commentary is to highlight the ageism that has emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic...
Ideas relating to ‘successful’ and ‘active’ ageing have become firmly embedded in research and polic...