Agency has become an essential component of discussions concerning selfhood, well-being, and care in dementia studies but the concept itself is rarely clearly defined and the use of this term can be confusing and conflicting. This paper outlines some of the key ways in which agency has been conceptualised in relation to dementia, highlighting the complexities surrounding this concept and focusing on agency in a way that is tied to our ideas about citizenship, legal and human rights. Seven key dimensions of agency are examined: embodiment, emotions, sense of agency, intentional conscious action, the social context of agency, decision making and moral responsibility. Using a critical realist approach, this paper brings together the diverse wa...
As older people begin to develop dementia, we confront ethical questions about when and how t...
Personhood has provided a lens for conceptualising dementia practice and research for over ten years...
Memory loss and other cognitive decline threaten people's capacities to make sense of the world and ...
People with dementia have been assumed to possess weak or even no agency, so this paper provides a n...
Objectives:Dementia often limits the agency of the person to such an extent that there is need for e...
In dementia research and care practice and there has been a turn to try to offer approaches that ack...
An explorative paper to describe how family carers, through the caregiving journey, reaffirm and pro...
The sense of agency is defined as the sense of oneself as the agent of one's own actions. This also ...
Within western cultures, portrayals of dementia as ‘a living death’ are being challenged by people l...
As identity and agency are central to the well-being of people with dementia, this paper explores wh...
Personhood has provided a lens for conceptualising dementia practice and research for over ten years...
It has become commonly expected that the “personhood” of people with dementia should be recognised, ...
This thesis explores the power of people with dementia who live alone to participate in decision-ma...
Background and aimsSensitivity to the rights of people with dementia is a key principle cited in the...
Sense of agency—the feeling of being the author of one’s actions—may be a critical component of one...
As older people begin to develop dementia, we confront ethical questions about when and how t...
Personhood has provided a lens for conceptualising dementia practice and research for over ten years...
Memory loss and other cognitive decline threaten people's capacities to make sense of the world and ...
People with dementia have been assumed to possess weak or even no agency, so this paper provides a n...
Objectives:Dementia often limits the agency of the person to such an extent that there is need for e...
In dementia research and care practice and there has been a turn to try to offer approaches that ack...
An explorative paper to describe how family carers, through the caregiving journey, reaffirm and pro...
The sense of agency is defined as the sense of oneself as the agent of one's own actions. This also ...
Within western cultures, portrayals of dementia as ‘a living death’ are being challenged by people l...
As identity and agency are central to the well-being of people with dementia, this paper explores wh...
Personhood has provided a lens for conceptualising dementia practice and research for over ten years...
It has become commonly expected that the “personhood” of people with dementia should be recognised, ...
This thesis explores the power of people with dementia who live alone to participate in decision-ma...
Background and aimsSensitivity to the rights of people with dementia is a key principle cited in the...
Sense of agency—the feeling of being the author of one’s actions—may be a critical component of one...
As older people begin to develop dementia, we confront ethical questions about when and how t...
Personhood has provided a lens for conceptualising dementia practice and research for over ten years...
Memory loss and other cognitive decline threaten people's capacities to make sense of the world and ...