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    Population aging in Cuba: coping with social care deficit

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    International audienceDemographic aging represents major social and economic challenges for Cuba. This paper examines the responses and coping mechanisms developed in Cuba over the past decades with regards to aging within Fassin's (2009) conceptual framework of moral economy. It demonstrates that the moral economies of social justice and homecare tend to conflict in a context of care deficit (Hochschild, 1995). The paper is based on several rounds of ethnographic fieldwork, participant observation and interviews conducted between 2009 and 2016, in Havana and other parts of Cuba,. It first analyzes the components of demographic aging, namely the increase of life expectancy, the decrease of fertility and migration. It then delves into public policies aiming to respond to the health care needs of the elderly, to foster their community integration, and to mitigate their impoverishment. Finally, it highlights how households develop strategies to cope with the care needs of aging relatives, in a context where market provision and institutional long-term care supplies are still incipient. Although constructed as a public problem and widely documented in Cuba, the pressure aging exerts on care systems has received little attention from social scientists. In this regard, this paper contributes to comparative knowledge on aging in Post-Soviet, Latin American and Caribbean countries

    Oliver Harvey, 1948–54

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