Purpose: Across the life-course, individuals are continuously relocating homes, reintegrating with places and renegotiating meanings, identities and resources that the new environment affords (Andrews, Cutchin, McCracken, Phillips & Wiles, 2007). This all-encompassing person-place unity occurs amidst fluctuating social (i.e., norms, values, expectations); political (i.e., leadership, power, influence, authority); and cultural (i.e., changing cultural beliefs and practices) landscapes. Importantly, consideration for the multi-layered aspects of place that shape notions of 'ageing in the right place' requires a theoretical perspective that encapsulates varying individual, community and structural factors. The theoretical work, highlightin...
In contrast to recent treatment of other social identities, geographers' work on age still focuses d...
Age is a conceptual challenge for geographical research due to its twofold character as a marker of ...
Background and Objectives: The age-friendly cities and communities (AFCC) agenda has led to a range ...
Purpose: Across the life-course, individuals are continuously relocating homes, reintegrating with p...
Background: Forced relocation is not always experienced as a single occurrence or event in time. Cur...
Applying and intersectional perspective, this chapter shows how techno-ageism is cut through various...
This thesis by publication critiques existing ageing-in-place concepts and discusses the need for ...
Ageing-in-place refers to the ability to live in one’s own home and community safely, independently,...
This article explores the interplay of inequality, space and age(ing) from an intersectional perspe...
Ageing-in-place policies have been implemented by many Western governments in order to delay and dec...
Intersectionality has received an increasing amount of attention in health inequalities research in ...
In contrast to recent treatment of other social identities, geographers' work on age still focuses d...
As societies experience the rapid demographic shift towards increased older adult populations, more ...
In contrast to recent treatment of other social identities, geographers' work on age still focuses d...
Age is a conceptual challenge for geographical research due to its twofold character as a marker of ...
Background and Objectives: The age-friendly cities and communities (AFCC) agenda has led to a range ...
Purpose: Across the life-course, individuals are continuously relocating homes, reintegrating with p...
Background: Forced relocation is not always experienced as a single occurrence or event in time. Cur...
Applying and intersectional perspective, this chapter shows how techno-ageism is cut through various...
This thesis by publication critiques existing ageing-in-place concepts and discusses the need for ...
Ageing-in-place refers to the ability to live in one’s own home and community safely, independently,...
This article explores the interplay of inequality, space and age(ing) from an intersectional perspe...
Ageing-in-place policies have been implemented by many Western governments in order to delay and dec...
Intersectionality has received an increasing amount of attention in health inequalities research in ...
In contrast to recent treatment of other social identities, geographers' work on age still focuses d...
As societies experience the rapid demographic shift towards increased older adult populations, more ...
In contrast to recent treatment of other social identities, geographers' work on age still focuses d...
Age is a conceptual challenge for geographical research due to its twofold character as a marker of ...
Background and Objectives: The age-friendly cities and communities (AFCC) agenda has led to a range ...