209 research outputs found

    Aging in the Twenty-First Century

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    The Hidden Age Revolution: Emergent Integration of All Ages

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    Over the past 30 years my colleagues and I have been focusing on conceptual and empirical work (the aging and society paradigm) that does not create policies, but can inform them. The most immediate phase of this long cumulative history is leading us now to hidden changes in people\u27s lives and social institutions that herald a new phenomenon world-wide--a phenomenon that may have momentous implications for the policies of the future. We call it age integration because it *integrates* older people with others of every age. When I come to the end of my lecture, I hope you will see the potential for age integration to transform the basis for policy in the 21st century. But before considering policy, I want to share with you my excitement about the age integration that would greatly affect it. Of course, we already know that lives have changed; they have become longer and healthier. But what many of us do not yet recognize is that two revolutionary changes, though still hidden, are beginning to emerge: (1) human lives are subtly extending so far that they create a new *age continuum*; (2) a silent metamorphosis in social structures is opening unexpected *opportunities for people of every age*. These hidden changes, and the pressures generated by the tensions between them, portend a virtual breakdown of the age barriers that once segregated the three boxes ; retirement and leisure for the old, work and family for the middle aged, and education for the young. With the barriers removed, older people could participate together with younger people in work, life-long education, community, religion, and many other structures--that is, they could become age integrated

    The status of women: Conceptual and methodological issues in demographic studies

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    This paper explores several conceptual problems in social demographic studies of the status of women, including failure to recognize the multidimensionality of women's status and its variation across social “locations,” the confounding of gender and class stratification systems, and the confounding of access to resources with their control. Also discussed are some generic problems in the measurement of female status, such as the sensitivity of particular indicators to social context, and the need to select consistent comparisons when judging the extent of gender inequality.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/45651/1/11206_2005_Article_BF01115740.pd

    SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH

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    Sociological research on age: legacy and challenge

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    Age Integration

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