Age groups: the elderly / old age Books

650 products


  • The Big Move

    Indiana University Press The Big Move

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewWe Americans prize independence, but for many elderly people, the price they pay for independence is loneliness and worthlessness. The Big Move is a fascinating attempt to marry personal experience with academic analysis to help us all reconceive of one option for later-life living. Moving to a continuing care retirement community need not be viewed as a withdrawal from life, but rather as a new platform to manage one's infirmities at the same time as one uses one's skills. * Huffington Post *This is a remarkable book about finding the right place to age. It uses a single true story, refracted through personal experience and multiple forms of expertise, to say as much as piles of data. You'll want to read it if you're looking for clear advice about the big move into continuing care, assisted living, even a nursing home. And it's appealing for anyone along the life course making "a big move." This book gives the perspective that is so often missing. It's a story not often told and too often dreaded. It tackles the broader social issue of how to age well and treat elders well on an irresistibly human scale. -- Sally Chivers, Professor of English Literature * Trent University *We have very few accounts of gerontologists who have grown old, and never before a memoir by a gerontologist who moved into a long-term care facility. This book is not only a first, but is a remarkable and riveting account of challenges all of us must contemplate. The author's own story is amplified by insights from other contributors to this volume, which altogether make it memorable and compelling. Highly recommended. -- Rick Moody, retired Vice President for Academic Affairs * AARP *Table of ContentsIntroduction: Home Places / Ruth Ray Karpen1. A Wife's Life, A Humanist's Journey, 2010-2012 / Anne Wyatt-Brown2. Coming to Care / Ruth Ray Karpen3. Lifelong Strengths Ground Later-Life Wisdom / Helen Q. KivnickAfterword: Making Oneself at Home / Margaret Morganroth GulletteEpilogue: Still on the Journey, 2012-2015 / Anne Wyatt-BrownAnnotated Bibliography Fiction / Margaret M. Gullette Mostly Non-Fiction / Helen Q. Kivnick, Ruth Ray Karpen, Anne Wyatt-Brown

    £13.29

  • The Expressive Lives of Elders

    Indiana University Press The Expressive Lives of Elders

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £62.90

  • The Expressive Lives of Elders

    Indiana University Press The Expressive Lives of Elders

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisCan traditional arts improve an older adult's quality of life? Are arts interventions more effective when they align with an elder's cultural identity? In The Expressive Lives of Elders, Jon Kay and contributors from a diverse range of public institutions argue that such mediations work best when they are culturally, socially, and personally relevant to the participants. From quilting and canning to weaving and woodworking, this book explores the role of traditional arts and folklore in the lives of older adults in the United States, highlighting the critical importance of ethnographic studies of creative aging for both understanding the expressive lives of elders and for designing effective arts therapies and programs. Each case study in this volume demonstrates how folklore and traditional practices help elders maintain their health and wellness, providing a road map for initiatives to improve the lives and well-being of America's aging population.

    4 in stock

    £26.99

  • Aging and the Indian Diaspora

    Indiana University Press Aging and the Indian Diaspora

    Book SynopsisAging in a transnational eraTrade ReviewThis is a book that is accessible as well as significant, fun to read and with important applications to both theory and practice in several domains. . . . Many of Lamb's informants are memorable and illustrate her point that agency remains among elders, that it is not just youth who initiate and think well about social change. The photos add to the quality of immediacy and liveliness. This is a recommended reading!February 2010 * H-Asia Reviews *Aging and the Indian Diaspora is lucidly written and solidly argued. . . . It should enjoy a wide readership among scholars of cross-cultural gerontology, as well as among those concerned with issues of family change among middle-class diasporic communities in the contemporary world. The book is also very well suited for classroom use, especially in advanced undergraduate courses on either of these topics. Vol. 112, No. 4, December 2010 * American Anthropologist *Lamb has produced a very easy to read, engaging, and good book. . . . [She] is able to capture a good deal about the culture of, and family relationships in, Bengali middle class families. * Contemporary Sociology *Table of ContentsPrefaceAcknowledgmentsNote on Translation and Transliteration1. Introduction: The Remaking of Aging2. The Production of Tradition, Modernity, and a New Middle Class3. The Rise of Old Age Homes in India4. Becoming an Elder-Abode Member5. Tea and the Forest: Making a Western Institution Indian6. Living Alone as a Way of Life7. Moving Abroad8. Changing Families and the StateAfterwordNotesBibliographyIndex

    £22.79

  • The Evening of Life

    University of Notre Dame Press The Evening of Life

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review“In this important and provocative book, the editors and authors make a compelling case for a much needed ‘ethics of aging’ that holistically addresses the unique character of the aging process and its role in defining a ‘good life.’” —Daniel B. Hinshaw, MD, author of Touch and the Healing of the World“Old age is presented as a question, asked from diverse perspectives. As readers view old age as a construction of medical policies, a philosophical puzzle, and a network of altruistic friends, they will be drawn in to ask what to call this period of life, how to respond to it, and ultimately how to live it.” —Arthur W. Frank, author of The Wounded Storyteller"Insights from The Evening of Life are both comforting and illuminating in discussions regarding the present and future of aging and the end of life." —Hastings Center Report"According to St. Paul, we will receive a transformed body that will make up for the current one's deficiencies, which are likely to be many if we have been fortunate enough to reach the old age whose gifts and challenges these authors so intelligently and sensitively explore." —Studies in Christian EthicsThose with a professional or personal interest in improving care for aging and dying adults will certainly find helpful insights within this book’s chapters. -Journal of Applied Gerontology

    3 in stock

    £70.55

  • The Evening of Life  The Challenges of Aging and

    University of Notre Dame Press The Evening of Life The Challenges of Aging and

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review“In this important and provocative book, the editors and authors make a compelling case for a much needed ‘ethics of aging’ that holistically addresses the unique character of the aging process and its role in defining a ‘good life.’” —Daniel B. Hinshaw, MD, author of Touch and the Healing of the World“Old age is presented as a question, asked from diverse perspectives. As readers view old age as a construction of medical policies, a philosophical puzzle, and a network of altruistic friends, they will be drawn in to ask what to call this period of life, how to respond to it, and ultimately how to live it.” —Arthur W. Frank, author of The Wounded Storyteller"Insights from The Evening of Life are both comforting and illuminating in discussions regarding the present and future of aging and the end of life." —Hastings Center Report"According to St. Paul, we will receive a transformed body that will make up for the current one's deficiencies, which are likely to be many if we have been fortunate enough to reach the old age whose gifts and challenges these authors so intelligently and sensitively explore." —Studies in Christian EthicsThose with a professional or personal interest in improving care for aging and dying adults will certainly find helpful insights within this book’s chapters. -Journal of Applied Gerontology

    15 in stock

    £25.19

  • Aging in TwentiethCentury Britain

    University of California Press Aging in TwentiethCentury Britain

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisAs today's baby boomers reach retirement and old age, this timely study looks back at the first generation who aged in the British welfare state. Using innovative research methods, Charlotte Greenhalgh sheds light on the experiences of elderly people in twentieth-century Britain. She adds further insights from the interviews and photographs of celebrated social scientists such as Peter Townsend, whose work helped transform care of the aged. A comprehensive and sensitive examination of the creative pursuits, family relations, work lives, health, and living conditions of the elderly, Aging in Twentieth-Century Britain charts the determined efforts of aging Britons to shape public understandings of old age in the modern era.Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: Aging and Twentieth-Century Britain 1. Experts and the Elderly: Social Research on Old Age 2. Talking with Peter Townsend: Elderly Britons at Home 3. Into the Institution: Residential Care for the Aged 4. “Making the Best of My Appearance”: Grooming in Old Age 5. Games with Time: Autobiography and Aging Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index

    4 in stock

    £27.00

  • A World Growing Old

    Pluto Press A World Growing Old

    Book SynopsisHow will our ageing populations change society?Trade Review'One of England's most imaginative and creative writers, with a preacher's talent for prophesy and a capacity for righteous indignation reminiscent of George Orwell' -- Richard Gott, Guardian'The inspirational Jeremy Seabrook beats any celebrity radical in the art of speaking hard truths through fine prose' -- Boyd Tonkin, IndependentTable of ContentsIntroduction - The ageing population of the world: demographic time-bomb or unique opportunity? 1. Ageing and the role of the elderly in the changing cultures of the world 2. Work and the elderly, in the West and the South 3. Themes and issues (i) Widowhood (ii) Witchcraft (iii) Remembering (iv) ...and forgetting (v) Sex in old age (vi) Ageing and sexual minorities (vii) Stranded in a world moving on (viii) Poverty in old age (ix) Old age in traumatised societies - war and natural catastrophe 4. North and South - sefety nets: the social security of flesh and blood and the social security of financial support. The elderly in individual countries, including USA, China, Vietnam, South Africa 5. Active Ageing; testimonies of the elderly 6. Self-Help, Mutual Help

    £22.49

  • Pinay on the Prairies

    University of British Columbia Press Pinay on the Prairies

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAn investigation into the experiences of Filipino women in Canada’s Prairie provinces, which reveals much about their understanding of transnational identities, feminism, migration, diaspora, and the rubric of multiculturalism.Table of ContentsIntroduction1 Gender, Migration, and Feminism2 Pinay Migration3 Welcoming Prairies4 Making Meanings: Identities and Integration5 Building Bridges: Activism and Community Engagement6 Vested TransnationalismConclusionNotesReferencesIndex

    1 in stock

    £26.99

  • University of British Columbia Press Aging Playfully

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    £22.49

  • FrontWave Boomers

    University of British Columbia Press FrontWave Boomers

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisGillian Ranson weaves front-wave boomers' stories of life and aging before and during the pandemic into a powerful account of how to make growing old more humane, for this generation and for everyone.Trade Review"Gillian Ranson’s book about aging comes as a welcome and informative guide ... Her book has lessons for us all." -- Jane Ross * Alberta Views *Gillian Ranson interviewed over 100 fellow boomers ... Her research also encompasses a range of journalism ... grey literature such as institute and government reports, and numerous academic studies. This commendable mix of approaches and sources results in a credible, readable book. -- Ginny Ratsoy * The British Columbia Review *Table of ContentsIntroduction1 Background on the Boomers2 Family Matters3 Friends and Communities4 Thinking Ahead5 Pandemic Portraits6 Lessons Learned7 Doing Things Differently8 Reimagining AgingNotes

    3 in stock

    £17.09

  • Grains from Grass

    Cornell University Press Grains from Grass

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn her ethnography of the Gwembe Tonga people of rural Zambia, Lisa Cliggett explores what happens to kinship ties in times of famine. The Tonga, a matrilineal Bantu-speaking society, had long lived and farmed along the banks of the Zambezi River, but...Trade Review"Grains from Grass is a rich and intimate exploration of what it means to be old and at the brink of survival in a poor rural community. Drawing on classic themes and methods of social anthropology, it provides a subtle account of sociocultural change." -- Alex de Waal, Fellow, Global Equity Initiative, Harvard University"In a readable but sophisticated introduction to anthropological approaches to the lives of the African poor, Lisa Cliggett describes age- and gender-specific dilemmas and strategies for physical, social, and spiritual welfare." -- Jane I. Guyer, The Johns Hopkins University"The themes of Grains from Grass transcend Africa and anthropology. Lisa Cliggett offers wonderful methodological lessons for transgenerational cooperation and provides a useful theoretical mechanism for making visible and for disentangling a complex set of relations that traditionally go unnoticed." -- James A. Pritchett, Boston UniversityTable of ContentsList of Maps Preface 1. Aging in the Non-Western World 2. Getting Down in the Valley 3. The Space and Time of Vulnerability 4. Making a Village-Style Living 5. Mother's Keepers, Father's Wives, and Residential Arrangements of the Old 6. Ancestors, Rituals, and Manipulating the Spirit World 7. Migration and Family Ties over Distance and Time 8. Getting By "Just Like That" Notes References Index

    1 in stock

    £23.74

  • Retirement on the Line

    Cornell University Press Retirement on the Line

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn Retirement on the Line, Caitrin Lynch explores what Vita Needle's commitment to an elderly workforce means for the employer, the workers, the community, and society more generally.Trade ReviewIn Retirement on the Line, Caitrin Lynch provides a welcome ethnography of the labors of old workers at Vita Needle, a family-owned factory in Needham, Massachusetts...Lynch does a superb job of attending to the voices of old workers in this factory, revealing the complex labor relations within contemporary capitalism, and complicating the discussion of exploitation. The readability of her book makes it an excellent addition to courses not only on aging but in the sociology of work, which tends to ignore old workers or see them as something 'other'—and for this reason, it also stands as a scholarly contribution for those who examine paid work. -- Toni Calasanti * American Journal of Sociology *Stressing a 'cultural anthropology' vantage point, and claiming that new understandings may arise from duly considered work in its culture-related dynamics, this book actually delivers valuable learnings on capitalism as a cultural frame. We learn from it not so much on the meanings of working at old age, but rather on old age capitalism and its meanings. Studying workers who take the accumulation of surplus-value as the measure of all values— this certainly provides a lesson on the undeniable resilience and continuance of the capitalist worldview. * Critique of Anthropology *The book is based on intensive ethnographic research undertaken by the author during 2006-2011. Working on Vita's shop floor, side by side with factory employees, enabled the author to produce a rich, nuanced, and insightful piece of anthropological writing that not only explores "what work means for people...of conventional retirement age," but also touches upon broader social issues such as aging, productivity, and work ethic in the contemporary United States...Lynch’s book expands beyond a mere case study and proposes broader reflections on the struggles and aspirations of elderly employees—a group rarely studied by sociologists of work. -- HannaGospodarczyk * Laboratorium: Russian Review of Social Research *Table of ContentsCast of Characters Introduction: Making Needles, Making LivesPart I: Up the Stairs Pigeonholed by Jim Downey 1. Making Money for Fred: Productivity, People, and Purpose 2. Antique Machinery and Antique People: The Vita Needle Family 3. No Chains on the Seats: Freedom and FlexibilityPart II: In the Press 4. Riding the Gray Wave: Global Interest in Vita Needle 5. Rosa, a National Treasure: Agency in the Face of Media StardomConclusion: Vita's Larger LessonsPostscriptNotes References Acknowledgments Index

    1 in stock

    £19.54

  • Aging Nation

    Johns Hopkins University Press Aging Nation

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsispopulation, and present a balanced-and reassuring-assessment of the future.Trade ReviewJames Schulz and Robert Binstock unquestionably take places of honor among the elders of the gerontological tribe. Decades of study, teaching, civic engagement, writing, and speaking to peers, lawmakers, and informed citizens have secured their reputations as knowledgeable, judicious, respected experts on the economics and politics of aging, respectively. -- W. Andrew Achenbaum, PhD Journal of Aging and Social Policy 2008 This is a useful primer for any person who wants a sneak preview of the difficult days ahead. -- Steve Goddard History Wire - Where the Past Comes Alive 2008 This timely book offers a worthwhile read for anyone interested in learning about the history of pension plans in the United States, their administration, and their economic impact on retirees. -- Marvin Pelaez Monthly Labor Review 2009 Highly recommended. Midwest Book Review 2008Table of ContentsPreface to the Paperback Edition1. Baby Boomers and the Merchants of Doom2. The Phony Threat of Population Aging3. The Search for Security with Dignity4. Dealing with Risk5. The Company Pension: Altruism or Self-Interest?6. The Pension Lottery: Personal Pension Accounts7. To Work or Not to Work: That Is the Question8. Health and Longevity: What Lies Ahead?9. A Gerontocracy? The Politics of Aging10. Framing the Issues for an Aging NationNotesIndex

    1 in stock

    £24.75

  • Other Ways of Growing Old

    Stanford University Press Other Ways of Growing Old

    Book SynopsisAs anthropologists, we offer this book about aging in a wide variety of human societies in the hope of its making three contributions. First, this book will help to remedy a massive neglect of old age by the discipline of anthropology. The pioneering work of Leo Simmons (1945) has remained a lonely monument since the 1940''s, for despite recent interest in the subject of aging in modern Western societies on the part of social gerontologists and sociologists, little has been done by anthropologists on aging in non-Western societies. Where it has been treated at all, it has been in the form either of a few final paragraphs in the discussion of the life cycle or of a simple ethnographic fact among other facts about a certain social system. What has been missing has been any attempt to put aging in a cross-cultural or comparative perspective, to give this vital subject the same treatment that has been accorded marriage, for example, or death or inheritance or sex roles.Second, thTrade Review'These perspectives on aging include a chapter from physical anthropology, one from primatology, and social structural studies from mile different cultures ... in the Kalahari Desert, northern Canada, Zambia, Micronesia, New Guinea, Afghanistan, Taiwan, South India, and North America's northwest coast. These studies are well-balanced in quality and coverage with respect to the organizational themes, and the authors' various styles of presentation keep the reading lively. It is an interesting book and should be useful as a text.' Science Books and Films (A.A.A.S.)Table of ContentsContents EISDORFER CARL AMOSS PAMELA T. HARRELL STEVAN WEISS KENNETH M. HRDY SARAH BLAFFER BIESELE MEGAN HOWELL NANCY SHARP HENRY S. ARSDALE PETER W. VAN COLSON ELIZABETH SCUDDER THAYER NASON JAMES D. SHAHRANI M. NAZIF HARRELL STEVAN HIEBERT PAUL G. AMOSS PAMELA T.

    £25.19

  • Making Meaningful Lives  Tales from an Aging

    University of Pennsylvania Press Making Meaningful Lives Tales from an Aging

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Making Meaningful Lives is a carefully conducted and beautifully written ethnography about existential human questions: what is a meaningful life and how can we lead it? Iza Kavedžiji explores these questions through the narratives of elderly people living in Osaka, Japan. In so doing, she adds a fresh and new perspective to the preponderance of literature on aging (in) Japan . . . [T]he book captivates not only through its detailed insights on the life worlds of the informants but also through its optimism and its fresh and new perspective on aging and on being elderly." * Contemporary Japan *"[A]n excellent and timely contribution to the literature on Japan’s aging society. It supplies a highly original ethnographic case study approach that allows the reader to view aging holistically from the inside out. Thanks to the quality and depth of documentation and interpretation, it also convincingly translates and interprets the aging experience...Making Meaningful Livesargues persuasively that aging requires a radical rethinking in terms of how society frames individually lived experiences and the human creation of meaning" * Japan Review *"Making Meaningful Lives is engrossing, beautifully written, and well-researched. It demonstrates compellingly that a book centered on aging and older persons can illuminate much broader processes." * Sarah Lamb, Brandeis University *

    1 in stock

    £35.10

  • My Last Eight Thousand Days

    LUP - University of Georgia Press My Last Eight Thousand Days

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisLee Gutkind played a crucial role in establishing literary, narrative nonfiction in the marketplace and in the academy. In My Last Eight Thousand Days, he turns his notepad and tape recorder inward, using his skills as an immersion journalist to perform a deep dive on himself.

    2 in stock

    £25.32

  • John Wiley & Sons The Elderly and Old Age Support in Rural China

    1 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £20.85

  • Old Age New Science Gerontologists and Their

    University of Pittsburgh Press Old Age New Science Gerontologists and Their

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisExplores how a group of American and British life scientists contributed to gerontology's development as a multidisciplinary field. It examines the foundational biosocial visions they shared. Hyung Wook Park shows how these visions shaped popular discourses on aging, directly influenced the institutionalization of gerontology, and reflected the biases of their founders.

    2 in stock

    £54.62

  • International Handbook on Ageing and Public

    Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd International Handbook on Ageing and Public

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisEach of these issues are broken down further and split into six comprehensive sections:• Context• Pensions• Health• Welfare• Case Studies• Policy Innovation and Civil SocietyAcademics interested in policy challenges for mature societies will find this Handbook a highly relevant reference tool.Trade Review‘International Handbook on Ageing and Public Policy gathers under one cover the collective knowledge of experts in the field who explore challenges arising from ageing populations around the world, and considers national state approaches to welfare for older people and how public and private initiatives work. College-level collections strong in public policies and aging with find this a powerful collection of in-depth articles suitable for framing inquiries and considering social structures.’ -- The Midwest Book Review‘This Handbook on ageing and public policy makes a substantial contribution in bringing together chapters spanning a -- breadth of issues in the areas of policy challenges and practitioner perspectives.’– EE Journal 1848 Social Policy & AdministrationTable of ContentsContents 1. Introduction: Conceptualising Social Policy for the Twenty-first-century Demography Sarah Harper 2. Introduction to Parts I-IV: Perspectives on the Challenges of Population Ageing PART I: POLICY CHALLENGES FOR MATURE SOCIETIES – CONTEXT 3. Drivers of Demographic Change in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries George W. Leeson 4. A Biodemographic Perspective on Longevity and Ageing Bruce A. Carnes 5. Migration and Ageing Societies Sarah Harper 6. On the Mechanical Contributions of Ageing to Global Income Inequality Parfait M. Eloundou-Enyegue and Michael Tenikue 7. Population Ageing and the Size of the Welfare State Vincenzo Galasso and Paola Profeta PART II: POLICY CHALLENGES FOR MATURE SOCIETIES – PENSIONS 8. Global Pension Systems Robert Holzmann 9. The Design and Implementation of Pension Systems in Developing Countries: Issues and Options David E. Bloom and Roddy McKinnon 10. Understanding Pension Wealth Zhenyu Li and Anthony Webb 11. Rational Pension Reform Axel Börsch-Supan 12. National Transfer Accounts and Intergenerational Transfers Ron Lee and Andy Mason PART III: POLICY CHALLENGES FOR MATURE SOCIETIES – HEALTH 13. Assessing the Cost Effectiveness of Therapies for Older People Richard Edlin 14. Population Ageing and Health Care Expenditure Growth Ed Westerhout 15. Developing Appropriate and Effective Care for People with Chronic Disease Bert Vrieheof and Arianne Elissen PART IV: POLICY CHALLENGES FOR MATURE SOCIETIES – WELFARE 16. Sustainability and Intergenerational Justice in Age-related Transfers Kenneth Howse 17. Health and Social Protection Policies for Older People in Latin America Peter Lloyd-Sherlock 18. Ageing Electorates and Gerontocracy: The Politics of Ageing in a Global World Fernando M. Torres-Gil and Kimberly Spencer-Suarez 19. Working Beyond Retirement Age: Lessons for Policy David Lain and Sarah Vickerstaff 20. Families, Older Persons and Care in Contexts of Poverty: the Case of South Africa Jaco Hoffman PART V and VI: PRACTIONER PERSPECTIVES 21. Policy and Practitioner Responses to the Challenges of Population Ageing: Introduction Jaco Hoffman 22. Sustaining the Nordic Welfare Model in the Face of Population Ageing Virpi Timonen and Mikko Kautto 23. Kinship Solidarity in Southern Europe Chiara Saraceno 24. Ageing and Social Policy in Australia Jeni Warburton 25. The Pension System in China: An Overview Taichang Chen 26. How Technology is Re-shaping the Processes of Providing Health Care for Ageing Populations Robin Gauld 27. Ageing and Care Giving in America: the Immigrant Workforce B. Lindsay Lowell 28. Canada’s Live-in Caregiver Programme Ivy Lynn Bourgeault and Jelena Atanackovic PART VI: PRACTIONER PERSPECTIVES – POLICY INNOVATION AND CIVIL SOCIETY 29. Intergenerational Programmes and Policies in Aging Societies Matthew Kaplan and Mariano Sánchez 30. Population Ageing and Private Sector Provision: the Case of Dependent Older Women in Latin America Nélida Redondo 31. Demographic Change and the Role of Older People in the Voluntary Sector Karsten Hank and Marcel Erlinghagen 32. The Third Sector as a Provider of Services for Older People Ewa Leś 33. State-third Sector Partnership Frameworks: from Administration to Participation? Ingo Bode 34. Microfinance, Cooperatives and Timebanks- Community Provided Welfare Ed Collom 35. Faith-Based Organizations and the Provision of Care for Older People Lori Carter-Edwards, James H. Johnson Jr., Allan M. Parnell and Harold G. Koenig 36. Lifelong Learning and Employers: Re-skilling Older Workers John Field and Roy Canning 37. Retirement Planning and Financial Literacy Annamaria Lusardi Index

    4 in stock

    £185.00

  • Age and Dignity

    Edward Elgar Publishing Age and Dignity

    Book Synopsis

    £95.00

  • Comprehensive Evidence Based Interventions for

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Comprehensive Evidence Based Interventions for

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisA complete guide to evidence based interventions for children and adolescents The past decade has witnessed the development of numerous interventions proved to be highly effective; several treatments are now considered to be well established or probably efficacious interventions for children. Given the range of providers working with childrenclinical psychologists, child psychiatrists, clinical social workers, school psychologists, and marriage and family therapiststhis book is designed to provide all professionals the information they now need about the use of these evidence-based interventions (EBIs), as well as the evaluation criteria used to determine their efficacy in in meeting the mental health needs of children. Alfano and Beidel have assembled a team of experts to write the disorder chapters. Each chapter begins with an overview of the disorder then delves into evidence-based approaches to treatment, the impact of parental involvement, case-by-case modificatiTable of ContentsPreface xi About the Editors xiii Contributors xv I Treatment Considerations and Contextual Issues 1 1 Development Considerations in Assessment and Treatment 3Amy Przeworski and Kimberly Dunbeck 2 Ethical Considerations in Mental Health Treatment and Interventions with School-Age Children and Adolescents 15Adam L. Fried and Celia B. Fisher 3 Controversial Therapies for Children 31Gerald P. Koocher, Madeline R. McMann, and Annika O. Stout 4 Evidence-Based Treatments for Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral Problems in Ethnic MinorityChildren and Adolescents 43Lindsay E. Holly, Amanda Chiapa, and Armando A. Piña 5 New Methods of Service Delivery for Children’s Mental Health Care 55Jonathan S. Comer, R. Meredith Elkins, Priscilla T. Chan, and Deborah J. Jones 6 Dissemination and Implementation of Evidence-Based Treatments for Children and Adolescents 73Michael A. Southam-Gerow, Cassidy C. Arnold, Carrie B. Tully, and Julia Revillion Cox II Disorder-Focused Interventions 91 7 Anxiety Disorders in Children 93Laura D. Seligman, Erin F. Swedish, and Thomas H. Ollendick 8 Anxiety Disorders in Adolescents 111Michael A. Mallott and Deborah C. Beidel 9 Depressive Disorders in Children 129Winnie W. Chung and Mary A. Fristad 10 Depressive Disorders in Adolescents 147Megan Jeffreys and V. Robin Weersing 11 Bipolar Disorders 163Amy E. West and Amy T. Peters 12 Evidence-Based Treatment of Attention-Deficit/Hyperac tivity Disorder in Children and Adolescents 177Heather A. Jones and Annie E. Rabinovitch 13 Treatment of Conduct Problems and Disruptive Behavior Disorders 195Nicole P. Powell, John E. Lochman, Caroline L. Boxmeyer, Luis Alberto Jimenez-Camargo, Megan E. Crisler, and Sara L. Stromeyer 14 Autism Spectrum Disorders 213Susan W. White, Nicole L. Kreiser, and Matthew D. Lerner 15 Evidence-Based Interventions for Eating Disorders 231Peter M. Doyle, Catherine Byrne, Angela Smyth, and Daniel Le Grange 16 Elimination Disorders 243Jaclyn A. Shepard, Lee M. Ritterband, Frances P. Thorndike, and Stephen M. Borowitz III Other Interventions for Children 259 17 Treatment of Insomnia and Nighttime Fears 261Michelle A. Clementi, Jessica Balderas, Jennifer Cowie, and Candice A. Alfano 18 Problematic School Absenteeism 275Christopher A. Kearney and Emma Ross 19 Trauma-Related Problems and Disorders 287Brian Fisak 20 Bullied Children 301Juventino Hernandez Rodriguez, Samantha J. Gregus, James T. Craig, Freddie A. Pastrana, and Timothy A. Cavell 21 Adherence to Medical Regimens 317Alan M. Delamater, Ashley N. Marchante, and Amber L. Daigre 22 Overweight and Obesity 335Anna Vannucci and Marian Tanofsky-Kraff 23 Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Trichotillomania 353Jennifer Cowie, Michelle A. Clementi, Deborah C. Beidel, and Candice A. Alfano Author Index 371 Subject Index 389

    2 in stock

    £53.96

  • Great Myths of Aging

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Great Myths of Aging

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisShattering the tired old cliches about older people, Great Myths of Aging utilizes current research to explore the myths, generalizations, and anti-aging stereotypes associated with the elderly.Trade Review“What does the future hold for us as we age? Most of us have difficulty thinking of ourselves as aging, no matter how old we are. In this lively, engaging book, Great Myths of Aging, Erber and Szuchman remind us that we are aging every minute of every day. Almost all of us hold ageist stereotypes, even as we know that we will become a part of this often stigmatized group. Psychologists and laypeople alike are familiar with the commonly held ageist beliefs, those that involve the asexual, grouchy old man or woman living in a nursing home waiting for death. Erber and Szuchman not only identify and “bust” these more common myths, but cleverly identify at least 35 additional fallacies, replacing them with authoritative information.” PsycCritiques, June 2015Table of ContentsAcknowledgments xi Introduction 1 1 The Body 6 “Speak up! I can’t hear you!” 6 #1 It is best to speak to an older person as you would to a small child – loudly, slowly, and with exaggerated emphasis 7 #2 Hearing aids are beneficial for older adults in just about any situation, but many are just too stubborn to use them 9 You can’t be too careful (or … falling down and crashing cars) 12 #3 Older people worry too much about falling 13 #4 Older people get into more car accidents than younger people 15 Now that you don’t have sex anymore… 20 #5 Older people lose interest in sex 20 #6 Older women do not care about their looks 25 #7 Older people need to wear diapers, and how sexy is that? 29 #8 It’s always best for older adults to be married rather than single 32 2 The Mind 37 “I’m just having a senior moment” 37 #9 Brain power declines with age 38 #10 Older adults can’t or won’t learn new things – like technology. They would rather get a stupid phone than a smart one 42 “Did I tell you this already?” 46 #11 As people grow older, they get forgetful, and this is always a sign of dementia 46 #12 Alzheimer’s disease, dementia – they’re one and the same 50 #13 There’s no help for Alzheimer’s, so don’t waste time or money on diagnosis of memory problems 52 Older but wiser 55 #14 Wisdom comes with age, so older adults are wise 56 #15 Older adults are suckers and are easy prey for scam artists 59 #16 Older people are extra cautious when they have to make decisions 63 3 The Self 66 Older people are a disagreeable bunch 66 #17 Older people are hypochondriacs 67 #18 Older people are stingy 71 #19 Older people are grouchy 75 “Give me my lunch. Now go away.” 78 #20 Older adults prefer to be taken care of – they don’t want a lot of responsibilities 78 #21 Older people are introverted and prefer to spend time alone 81 Why try to improve your life if the future is so brief? 85 #22 Older adults have given up any hopes and dreams 85 #23 Older people are set in their ways 87 #24 Growing old is depressing; no wonder older people are more depressed than younger people 90 #25 Older adults do not benefit significantly from therapy 92 4 Living Contexts 98 Growing old can only mean there is more opportunity to enjoy the bliss of family relationships 98 #26 Older adults would choose living with kids and grandkids rather than living alone 99 #27 Older adults want to spend all their time with grandkids and they never have favorites 102 #28 Sibling relationships are stable throughout life 105 Retirement is for sissies 108 #29 Older workers are inferior to younger workers 109 #30 Older adults hardly ever have trouble getting work 111 #31 Retirement is depressing, so older adults only retire when they are forced to do so 113 #32 Retired older adults are privileged financially 117 #33 After they retire, older folks want to move to where it’s warm 122 5 Endings and Loss 124 All the good ones are either gay, married, or dead 124 #34 If older widows date, it’s to find a new husband 125 And then you die… 127 #35 A majority of older adults end up in nursing homes and stay there till they die 128 #36 Suicide is more common among adolescents and young adults than it is among older adults 131 #37 Older people have the greatest fear of death of any age group – they are the closest to it, so they should know 135 References 140 Index 161

    4 in stock

    £56.96

  • Great Myths of Aging

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Great Myths of Aging

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisShattering the tired old cliches about older people, Great Myths of Aging utilizes current research to explore the myths, generalizations, and anti-aging stereotypes associated with the elderly.Trade Review“What does the future hold for us as we age? Most of us have difficulty thinking of ourselves as aging, no matter how old we are. In this lively, engaging book, Great Myths of Aging, Erber and Szuchman remind us that we are aging every minute of every day. Almost all of us hold ageist stereotypes, even as we know that we will become a part of this often stigmatized group. Psychologists and laypeople alike are familiar with the commonly held ageist beliefs, those that involve the asexual, grouchy old man or woman living in a nursing home waiting for death. Erber and Szuchman not only identify and “bust” these more common myths, but cleverly identify at least 35 additional fallacies, replacing them with authoritative information.” PsycCritiques, June 2015Table of ContentsAcknowledgments xi Introduction 1 1 The Body 6 “Speak up! I can’t hear you!” 6 #1 It is best to speak to an older person as you would to a small child – loudly, slowly, and with exaggerated emphasis 7 #2 Hearing aids are beneficial for older adults in just about any situation, but many are just too stubborn to use them 9 You can’t be too careful (or … falling down and crashing cars) 12 #3 Older people worry too much about falling 13 #4 Older people get into more car accidents than younger people 15 Now that you don’t have sex anymore… 20 #5 Older people lose interest in sex 20 #6 Older women do not care about their looks 25 #7 Older people need to wear diapers, and how sexy is that? 29 #8 It’s always best for older adults to be married rather than single 32 2 The Mind 37 “I’m just having a senior moment” 37 #9 Brain power declines with age 38 #10 Older adults can’t or won’t learn new things – like technology. They would rather get a stupid phone than a smart one 42 “Did I tell you this already?” 46 #11 As people grow older, they get forgetful, and this is always a sign of dementia 46 #12 Alzheimer’s disease, dementia – they’re one and the same 50 #13 There’s no help for Alzheimer’s, so don’t waste time or money on diagnosis of memory problems 52 Older but wiser 55 #14 Wisdom comes with age, so older adults are wise 56 #15 Older adults are suckers and are easy prey for scam artists 59 #16 Older people are extra cautious when they have to make decisions 63 3 The Self 66 Older people are a disagreeable bunch 66 #17 Older people are hypochondriacs 67 #18 Older people are stingy 71 #19 Older people are grouchy 75 “Give me my lunch. Now go away.” 78 #20 Older adults prefer to be taken care of – they don’t want a lot of responsibilities 78 #21 Older people are introverted and prefer to spend time alone 81 Why try to improve your life if the future is so brief? 85 #22 Older adults have given up any hopes and dreams 85 #23 Older people are set in their ways 87 #24 Growing old is depressing; no wonder older people are more depressed than younger people 90 #25 Older adults do not benefit significantly from therapy 92 4 Living Contexts 98 Growing old can only mean there is more opportunity to enjoy the bliss of family relationships 98 #26 Older adults would choose living with kids and grandkids rather than living alone 99 #27 Older adults want to spend all their time with grandkids and they never have favorites 102 #28 Sibling relationships are stable throughout life 105 Retirement is for sissies 108 #29 Older workers are inferior to younger workers 109 #30 Older adults hardly ever have trouble getting work 111 #31 Retirement is depressing, so older adults only retire when they are forced to do so 113 #32 Retired older adults are privileged financially 117 #33 After they retire, older folks want to move to where it’s warm 122 5 Endings and Loss 124 All the good ones are either gay, married, or dead 124 #34 If older widows date, it’s to find a new husband 125 And then you die… 127 #35 A majority of older adults end up in nursing homes and stay there till they die 128 #36 Suicide is more common among adolescents and young adults than it is among older adults 131 #37 Older people have the greatest fear of death of any age group – they are the closest to it, so they should know 135 References 140 Index 161

    4 in stock

    £18.66

  • Integrating Expressive Arts and Play Therapy with

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Integrating Expressive Arts and Play Therapy with

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisClinicians certified in the expressive art therapies the visual arts, movement, drama, music, writing and other creative processes are typically unfamiliar with some of the interventions and approaches used in play therapy.Table of ContentsPreface xi Acknowledgments xv About the Editors xvii About the Contributors xix 1 The Expressive Arts Therapy Continuum: History and Theory 1Sandra L. Graves-Alcorn and Eric J. Green Introduction 1 Media Dimension Variables 3 Discerning Rationale 14 References 15 2 Play Therapy 17Athena A. Drewes and Sue C. Bratton Introduction 17 Rationale for Play Therapy 18 History and Development 18 Empirical Support 23 Procedures and Application 24 Conclusion 34 Specialized Training and Resources 35 References 36 3 Art Therapy 41Reina Lombardi Introduction 41 Art Therapy: Theory 42 Research 48 Art Therapy: Process and Procedures 50 Practical Techniques 53 Conclusion 59 Specialized Training and Resources 60 References 61 4 Drama Therapy 67Eleanor Irwin Introduction 67 Drama Therapy: Process and Procedures 69 Blending Drama/Theatre and Therapy in NADTA 72 Effects of Attachment and a Nurturing Environment on the Ability to Work and Play 75 Drama Therapy Techniques 78 Drama Therapy Techniques With Different Ages 81 Conclusion 89 Specialized Training and Resources 90 References 97 5 Integrating Play Therapy and Sandplay Therapy 101Rie Rogers Mitchell, Harriet S. Friedman, and Eric J. Green Introduction 101 Therapeutic Play 102 Sandplay in a Play Therapy Setting 104 Conclusion 118 Specialized Training and Resources 119 References 123 6 Working With Children Using Dance/Movement Therapy 125Mariah Meyer LeFeber Introduction 125 Dance/Movement Therapy: Process and Procedures 126 Case Studies 136 Conclusion 143 Specialized Training and Resources 143 References 146 7 Music Therapy 149Susan Hadley and Nicole Steele Introduction 149 Music Therapy: Process and Procedures 153 Music Therapy Methods 155 Practical Techniques for Nonspecialists 165 Conclusion 173 Specialized Training and Resources 173 References 178 8 The Therapeutic Uses of Photography in Play Therapy 181Robert Irwin Wolf Introduction 181 Historical Overview 183 Photography as a Therapeutic Modality: The Power of the Image 184 The Importance of the Unconscious 185 The Range of Processing Visual Metaphors 186 A Note of Caution 186 Technological Update 188 Special Considerations of Confidentiality 190 Suggestions for Creative Project Directives 191 Detailed Digital Editing Directions for More Advanced Projects 195 Case Studies: Clinical and Creative Uses of Photography 198 Conclusion 201 Specialized Training and Resources 201 References 202 9 Poetry Therapy 205Diane L. Kaufman, Rebecca C. Chalmers, and Wendy Rosenberg Introduction 205 Poetry Therapy: Process and Procedures 207 Practical Techniques and Case Studies 215 Conclusion 222 Specialized Trainings and Resources 223 References 227 10 Integrating Play and Expressive Art Therapy Into Educational Settings: A Pedagogy for Optimistic Therapists 231Jodi M. Crane and Jennifer N. Baggerly Introduction to Creative Experiential Learning 231 Preparation 233 Process 238 Activities 241 CEL Classroom Scenario 247 Conclusion 248 References 249 11 Integrating Play and Expressive Art Therapy Into Small Group Counseling With Preadolescents: A Humanistic Approach 253Sue C. Bratton, Dalena Dillman Taylor, and Sinem Akay Introduction 253 Integrating Play and Expressive Art Therapy Into Small Group Counseling with Preadolescents: Process and Procedures 257 Practical Application 264 Conclusion 278 References 278 12 Integrating Play and Expressive Art Therapy Into Communities: A Multimodal Approach 283Julia Byers Introduction 283 Context 285 School Community Response 288 Shattered Worldview 289 Expressive Therapies Haven 292 References 300 Author Index 303 Subject Index 311

    1 in stock

    £37.46

  • Great Jobs for Everyone 50  Updated Edition

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Great Jobs for Everyone 50 Updated Edition

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisYou can find profitable, fulfilling work after 50! Great Jobs for Everyone 50+ provides an invaluable treasure trove of information for anyone seeking employment past the age of 50.Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix About the Author xiii Introduction 1 Part I Great Jobs Chapter 1 Great Part-Time Jobs 15 Chapter 2 Great Work-from-Home Jobs 67 Chapter 3 Great Nonprofit Jobs 89 Chapter 4 Great Healthcare Jobs 101 Chapter 5 Great Tech Jobs 117 Chapter 6 Great Jobs in Education 125 Chapter 7 Great Skilled Trade Jobs 137 Chapter 8 Great Jobs to Ride the Age Wave 149 Part II The Great Jobs Workshop Chapter 9 How to Plan for Your Second Act 165 Chapter 10 Strategies for 50+ Job Hunters 177 Chapter 11 Adding New Skills 189 Chapter 12 Volunteer Your Way to a Job 197 Chapter 13 How to Prepare for Nonprofit Work 209 Chapter 14 Tips for a Great Resume and Cover Letter 217 Chapter 15 Job Hunting and Social Media 235 Chapter 16 Navigating the Job Search Boards 261 Chapter 17 Tapping Others for Help 277 Chapter 18 Great Job Interview Tips 299 Chapter 19 Special Job Circumstances 317 Chapter 20 Negotiating Pay 333 Chapter 21 Why Part-Time or Contract Work Is Worth It 343 Chapter 22 Be Your Own Boss 351 Afterword 371 Index 377

    15 in stock

    £15.29

  • International Perspectives on the WellBeing of

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd International Perspectives on the WellBeing of

    Book SynopsisOld age represents a new frontier. The number of older people is increasing throughout the world. This changing demography affects individuals, but also families, communities and societies. The focus of this special issue is the well-being of older adults on different continents. Scientists from around the world address this issue using a wide array of research designs and methodologies to provide a broad perspective on aging. Five topics are considered: Well-Being among Older Adults; Social Support; Functional Status, Well-Being, and Successful Aging; Cross-Cultural Approaches to the Study of Aging; and Research Perspectives in Aging. This volume clearly demonstrates that scientists have much to contribute to the goal of optimizing the experience of aging and creating a society for all ages.Table of ContentsIntroduction 617 Well-Being: Concepts And Measures 627 Social Support 645 Functional Status, Well-Being, And Successful Aging 715 Cross-Cultural Approaches To The Study Of Aging 767 Research Perspectives in Aging 825

    £30.35

  • Ageism 2005

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Ageism 2005

    Book SynopsisHumans automatically categorize others in social perception. Some categorizations race, gender, and age -- are so automatic that they are termed primitive categories. As we categorize, we develop stereotypes about the categories. Researchers know much about racism and sexism, but comparatively little about prejudice based on age. The papers in this issue highlight the current empirical and theoretical work on understanding the origins and consequences of stereotyping and prejudice against older adults. With the aging baby boomer demographic, it is especially timely for researchers to work to understand how society can shed its institutionalized ageism and promote respect for elders.Table of ContentsAgeism: Prejudice Against Our Feared Future Self. A Terror Management Perspective on Ageism. Attitudes Toward Younger and Older Adults: An Updated Meta-Analytic Review. This Old Stereotype: The Pervasiveness and Persistence of the Elderly Stereotype. Ageism and Ageist Language Across the Life Span: Intimate Relationships and Non-intimate Interactions. Re-Vision of Older Television Characters: A Stereotype-Awareness Intervention. Perceiving Age Discrimination in Response to Intergenerational Inequity. The Social Separation of Old and Young: A Root of Ageism. Ageism and Age Categorization. Models of the Aging Self. Ageism Across the Lifespan: Towards a Self-Categorization Model of Ageing. Erratum: "Mothers and Fathers in the Workplace: How Gender and Parental Status Influence Judgments of Job-Related Competence"

    £37.00

  • Aging Together

    Johns Hopkins University Press Aging Together

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDrawing on medicine, social science, philosophy, and religion to provide a broad perspective on aging, Aging Together offers a vision of relationships filled with love, joy, and hope in the face of a condition that all too often elicits anxiety, hopelessness, and despair.Trade ReviewA serious, scholarly, and sensitive book. -- Mary Gergen PsycCRITIQUES This must-read volume will inspire the reader to contemplate the call to care for others with self-giving love. Highly recommended. Choice This is not a how-to handbook but a kindly and perhaps over-optimistic general discussion that will be of interest to caregivers, particularly Americans, and particularly those coming from a religious background. The rest of us can all gain something from it too, however... Aging Together reminds us that warmth and friendship can be maintained in trying situations. -- Martin Guha International Psychogeriatrics Readable and useful...Anyone who wants to teach, practise or encourage person-centred care for people with dementia will find a lot in this book. -- Ibadete Fetahu Nursing Times This is not just a book about ageing, dementia, and friendship; it is a book that will take the reader on a journey that will, hopefully, leave them in a better place than where they started... An excellent account of travelling along the dementia road. -- Kathryn Mitchell Ageing and Society A compelling call to arms for a more caring, related society-a flourishing community-from which all can benefit, and in which all have a part to play. -- Justine McGovern LMSW Journal of Gerontological Social Work Aging Together offers a prophetic perspective by challenging our socially constructed versions of reality and our tendency to look for medical miracles and cures. Instead we should work to create communities that are hospitable to the cognitively impaired. -- Anthony B. Robinson Christian CenturyTable of ContentsPrefaceAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Dilemmas of Dementia Diagnoses2. Receiving the Diagnosis3. Personhood4. What Is Friendship?5. When Our Friends Travel the Dementia Road6. Dementia Fear and Anxiety7. Beyond Fear and Anxiety8. The Flourishing Community9. Congregations as Schools for Friendship10. The Things That Abide11. Practicing Friendship in the "Thin Places"12. Memory, Forgetting, and the Present TimeDiscussion QuestionsNotesReferencesIndex

    1 in stock

    £23.85

  • Senior Living Communities

    Johns Hopkins University Press Senior Living Communities

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe essential guide to managing senior living communitiesnow updated!Senior Living Communities has long been considered the most comprehensive guide to revolutionizing the management practices of communities catering to seniors. Now in its third edition, Benjamin W. Pearce''s updated book lays out the latest operational guidelines, assessment tools, and intervention options to transform how to provide care and enhance the quality of life for residents.With a focus on measuring and understanding health and lifestyle progression, this edition introduces how assessment tools can establish a baseline and enable tracking of changes in residents'' health conditions. Equipped with this invaluable information, providers and primary care professionals can make informed decisions, tailor treatments, and improve the quality of life for their residents. Offering guidance on improving safety alongside advice on navigating increasingly complex lifestyle challenges, Pea

    10 in stock

    £70.55

  • Social Class in Later Life

    Bristol University Press Social Class in Later Life

    Book SynopsisSocial class in later life: Power, identity and lifestyle provides the most up-to-date collection of new and emerging research relevant to contemporary debates on the relationship between class, culture, and later life.Trade Review"Anyone interested in social gerontology will want this short edited volume on their bookshelves - for the references and for the substantive content of the chapters." Sociology of Health & Fitness "This eloquent, thought-provoking collection will be essential reading for scholars of ageing and all with an interest in policy linked to ageing." Professor Sara Arber, Centre for Research on Ageing and Gender (CRAG), University of Surrey "A much-needed collection on social class and older age which looks critically at the constraints placed on older people and the emerging cultures of later life." Journal of Social Policy "A most welcome collection that provides a much-needed and up-to-date orientation on the open frontiers of class across the life course." Martin Kohli, European University Institute and Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences "This fascinating edited volume brings together top-notch scholars who each cast a unique lens on a rarely studied topic. A must-read for students of social gerontology, stratification, and inequalities." Professor Deborah Carr, Chair, Department of Sociology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ "An exciting collection which successfully sets out to re-invigorate the consideration of class in gerontology. The editors have done a fantastic job of bringing the diverse positions adopted by the contributors into dialogue with each other." Professor James Nazroo, Sociology and CCSR, University of ManchesterTable of ContentsIntroduction ~ Marvin Formosa and Paul Higgs; Social class structures and social mobility: the background context ~ Wendy Bottero; Ageing and class in a globalised world ~ Chris Phillipson; Measuring social class in later life ~ Alexandra Lopes; Social class, age and identity in later life ~ Martin Hyde and Ian Rees Jones Class, pensions and old-age security ~ Elizangela Storelli and John Williamson; Class and health inequalities in later life ~ Ian Rees Jones and Paul Higgs; Class, care and caring ~ Christina Victor; Social work, class and later life ~ Trish Hafford-Letchfield; The changing significance of social class in later life ~ Marvin Formosa and Paul Higgs.

    £77.39

  • Ageing Meaning and Social Structure

    Policy Press Ageing Meaning and Social Structure

    Book SynopsisA wide range of contributors focus on major issues in ageing such as autonomy, agency, frailty, lifestyle, social isolation, dementia and professional challenges in social work and participatory research.Trade Review"A much-needed integration of two relatively new but flourishing areas of ageing studies, which have developed separately up to now. I gained fresh insights from each and every chapter." Peter G. Coleman, Professor of Psychogerontology, University of SouthamptonTable of ContentsIntroduction ~ Jan Baars and Chris Phillipson; Connecting meaning with social structure: Theoretical foundations ~ Jan Baars and Chris Philipson; My own life. Ethics, ageing and lifestyle ~Joseph Dohmen; Rethinking agency in late life: structural and interpretive approaches ~ Amanda Grenier and Chris Phillipson; Dementia: Beyond structures of medicalization and cultural neglect ~ Margreet Th.Bruens; Self-realization and ageing: a spiritual perspective ~ Hanne Laceulle; Social ability or social frailty? The balance between autonomy and connectedness in the lives of older people ~ Anja Machielse and Roelof Hortulanus; Critical perspectives on social work with older people ~ Mo Ray; Community-based participatory action research: opportunities and challenges for critical gerontology ~ Friederike Ziegler and Thomas Scharf; Commentary: Contingent Ageing, Naturalization and Some Rays of Intellectual Hope ~ Dale Dannefer and Jielu Lin.

    £77.39

  • Ageing in the Mediterranean

    Bristol University Press Ageing in the Mediterranean

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis important and timely volume brings together a distinguished set of international scholars who provide rich information about the social, economic, political, and historical factors responsible for shaping ageing policy in the Mediterranean region.Trade Review"The book achieves its aim of addressing the tension between unity and variety in the Mediterranean region and is particularly effective at highlighting the complexities of migration within the region in relation to ageing." Ageing & SocietyTable of ContentsIntroduction ~ Joseph Troisi and Hans-Joachim von Kondratowitz: Part one:Long term impact of social conceptions of ageing: Future of Demographic Regimes in South Mediterranean, Ageing and Other Implications ~ Youssef Courbage; Longevity, institutional context and family values in southern Europe ~ Pier Paolo Viazzo; Becoming Conscious of the whole "Mediterranean": Old Cleavages and Recent Developments ~ Hans-Joachim von Kondratowitz: Part two: Social spectrum of ageing in the Mediterranean: The New Risk of Dependency in Old Age and (missed) Employment Opportunities. A discussion of the Southern European model in a Comparative Perspective ~ Barbara Da Roit, Amparo Gonzalez Ferrer, and Francisco Javier Moreno Fuentes; Ageing and Employment in the Mediterranean: Old and New Challenges in the Global Crisis ~ Annamaria Simonazzi and Fiorenza Deriu; The Present and Future Health Status of Older People in the Mediterranean Region ~ Judy Triantafillou and Elizabeth Mestheneos Part three: Transnational migration as important incentive for the ageing experience: Migration, Retirement and Transnationalism around the Mediterranean Countries ~ Claudine Attias-Donfut; Migrant Care Work for Elderly Households: Trends and Developments in Italy on the Background of Global Developments ~ Chiatti C., Di Rosa M., Barbabella F., Greco C., Melchiorre M.G., Principi A., Santini S., Lamura G; Part four: The Diversity of Ageing Experiences in the South-eastern Mediterranean: Aging in Israel: Caring for Frail Older Persons ~ Esther Iecovich; Ageing in Lebanon: Evidence and Challenges ~ Nabil Kronfol and Abla Mehio Sibai; Ageing in Place in the Maltese islands ~ Joseph Troisi; New Approaches to Familialism in the Management of Social Policy for Old Age: Lessons from the Recent Reforms in Long Term Care in Portugal ~ Alexandra Lopes; Ageing in Turkey - The Peter Pan Syndrome? ~ Arun Ozgur; Ageing in the Southern Shore of the Mediterranean: The Tunisian example ~ Radhouane Gouiaa; Conclusion ~ Joseph Troisi and Hans-Joachim von Kondratowitz.

    5 in stock

    £77.39

  • Return Migration in Later Life

    Policy Press Return Migration in Later Life

    Book SynopsisThe main objective of this edited volume is to explore the motivations, decision making processes, and consequences, when older people consider or accomplish return migration to their place of origin; and also to raise the public policy profile of this increasingly important subject.Table of ContentsIntroduction: charting the waters of return migration in later life ~ John Percival; Older immigrants leaving Sweden ~ Martin Klinthall; Place and residence attachments in Canada's older population ~ K. Bruce Newbold; Ageing immigrants and the question of return: new answers to an old dilemma? ~ Claudio Bolzman; Caribbean return migration in later-life: family issues and transnational experiences as influential pre-retirement factors ~ Dennis Conway, Robert B Potter and Godfrey St. Bernard; 'We belong to the land': older British immigrants in Australia contemplating and realising return home ~ John Percival; Diasporic returns to the city: Anglo-Indian and Jewish visits to Calcutta in later life ~ Alison Blunt, Jayani Bonnerjee and Noah Hysler-Rubin; Returning to 'roots': Estonian-Australian child migrants visiting the homeland ~ Brad Ruting; Ageing in the ancestral homeland: ethno-biographical reflections on return migration in later life ~ Anastasia Christou; 'The past is a foreign country': vulnerability to mental illness among return migrants: Gerard Leavey and Joanne Eliacin; The blues of the ageing 'retornados': narratives on the return to Chile ~ Erik Olsson; Concluding reflections ~ John Percival.

    £77.39

  • Ageing with Disability

    Bristol University Press Ageing with Disability

    Book SynopsisThis is the first book to address the issue of ageing after a long life with disability. It breaks new ground through its particular life course perspective, examining what it means to age with a physical or mental disability.Trade Review“This book is a significant contribution to the study of ageing and disability from a life course perspective. It provides a fascinating, theoretically well-informed treatise of how older people make sense of disability.” Professor Rafael Lindqvist, Uppsala University, Sweden“This significant and original collection will change perspectives on the interplay between ageing and disability in ways that will be wholly beneficial to older people and policy making alike.” Joanna Bornat, Emeritus Professor, The Open UniversityTable of ContentsAgeing with disability – An introduction ~ Eva Jeppsson Grassman and Anna Whitaker; Time, age and the failing body. A long life with disability ~ Eva Jeppsson Grassman; Disability, identity and ageing ~ Lotta Holme; Is it possible to ‘age successfully’ with extensive physical impairments? ~ Annika Taghizadeh Larsson; Being one’s illness: on mental disability and ageing ~ Per Bülow and Tommy Svensson; In the shade of disability reforms and policy – parenthood, ageing and life-long care ~ Anna Whitaker; Ageing and care among disabled couples ~ Cristina Joy Torgé; Living and ageing with disability – summary and conclusion ~ Anna Whitaker and Eva Jeppsson Grassman.

    £77.39

  • Safeguarding Older People from Abuse

    Bristol University Press Safeguarding Older People from Abuse

    Book SynopsisThis critical and challenging book makes a strong case for the development of ethically-driven, research-informed policy and practice to safeguard older people from abuse.Trade Review"Angie Ash presents a strongly argued case for fundamental change in policy making and practice to protect older people from abuse and for a new approach that is informed by theory, critically aware and ethically driven. This book is written with clarity of purpose and perspective and deserves to be read widely." Dr Liz Lloyd, Reader in Social Gerontology, University of Bristol“This book on safeguarding of older people presents a critical and balanced overview of practice, policies and research. With Angie Ash’s ethical quest for the “right action”, inertia can no longer be accepted. This book is essential reading and will become a classic training resource.” Professor Marie Beaulieu, Université de Sherbrooke, Québec, CanadaTable of ContentsContexts to safeguarding older people from abuse; The need for theory, critical thinking and practice; The abuse of older people; Adult protection, safeguarding and personalisation; Public policy implementation in street-level bureaucracies; A case study of street-level policy implementation to protect older people from abuse; Discretion and dissonance in adult protection work; Cultures and contexts of complicity; Ethics, policy and practice; Safeguarding older people from abuse: ethical futures.

    £77.39

  • Safeguarding Older People from Abuse

    Bristol University Press Safeguarding Older People from Abuse

    Book SynopsisThis critical and challenging book makes a strong case for the development of ethically-driven, research-informed policy and practice to safeguard older people from abuse.Trade Review"Angie Ash presents a strongly argued case for fundamental change in policy making and practice to protect older people from abuse and for a new approach that is informed by theory, critically aware and ethically driven. This book is written with clarity of purpose and perspective and deserves to be read widely." Dr Liz Lloyd, Reader in Social Gerontology, University of Bristol“This book on safeguarding of older people presents a critical and balanced overview of practice, policies and research. With Angie Ash’s ethical quest for the “right action”, inertia can no longer be accepted. This book is essential reading and will become a classic training resource.” Professor Marie Beaulieu, Université de Sherbrooke, Québec, CanadaTable of ContentsContexts to safeguarding older people from abuse; The need for theory, critical thinking and practice; The abuse of older people; Adult protection, safeguarding and personalisation; Public policy implementation in street-level bureaucracies; A case study of street-level policy implementation to protect older people from abuse; Discretion and dissonance in adult protection work; Cultures and contexts of complicity; Ethics, policy and practice; Safeguarding older people from abuse: ethical futures.

    £26.59

  • Mental Health in Later Life

    Bristol University Press Mental Health in Later Life

    Book SynopsisDrawing together material from a number of different fields the book analyses the meaning and determinants of mental health amongst older populations and offers a critical review of the lifecourse, ageing and mental health debate.Trade Review“Professor Milne has produced an original and accessible analysis of a cutting-edge topic in later life. Definitely recommended for those learning about, researching and working for or with this population.” Mary Larkin, The Open University“Milne delivers a thoughtfully considered examination of mental health and later life. She exposes the complex and varied textures of people’s lives into older age that impact well-being. A highly readable text relevant for all health and social care students and practitioners.” Mary Pat Sullivan, Nipissing University“This ambitious book offers an innovative, scholarly approach to our understanding of mental health in later life. Integrating a life course perspective with an examination of factors that compromise or support the mental wellbeing of older adults, the book challenges our received wisdom in terms of research, policy and practice.” Christina Victor, Brunel University London“By taking a lifecourse approach and focusing on inequalities this book is a new and very important contribution to the literature on mental health in later life.” Toby Williamson, University of West London“I cannot think of anyone better equipped to take on the challenge of exploring the complex topic of mental health in later life than Alisoun Milne. She combines academic knowledge and research with her roots in social work, her capacity to stimulate critical thinking and her commitment to addressing inequalities and promoting social justice.” Tom Dening, University of NottinghamTable of ContentsForeword by Judith Phillips Introduction Demography, topography and mental health problems in later life Mental health, psychological well-being, successful ageing and quality of life The life course, inequalities and mental health in later life The impact of age-related risks and inequalities on mental health in later life Socio-economic disadvantage and poverty Abuse, mistreatment and neglect The fourth age, frailty and transitions The mental health and well-being of people living with dementia Conceptualising dementia Promotion and prevention Conclusion

    £29.44

  • Mental Health in Later Life

    Bristol University Press Mental Health in Later Life

    Book SynopsisDrawing together material from a number of different fields the book analyses the meaning and determinants of mental health amongst older populations and offers a critical review of the lifecourse, ageing and mental health debate.Trade Review“Professor Milne has produced an original and accessible analysis of a cutting-edge topic in later life. Definitely recommended for those learning about, researching and working for or with this population.” Mary Larkin, The Open University“Milne delivers a thoughtfully considered examination of mental health and later life. She exposes the complex and varied textures of people’s lives into older age that impact well-being. A highly readable text relevant for all health and social care students and practitioners.” Mary Pat Sullivan, Nipissing University“This ambitious book offers an innovative, scholarly approach to our understanding of mental health in later life. Integrating a life course perspective with an examination of factors that compromise or support the mental wellbeing of older adults, the book challenges our received wisdom in terms of research, policy and practice.” Christina Victor, Brunel University London“By taking a lifecourse approach and focusing on inequalities this book is a new and very important contribution to the literature on mental health in later life.” Toby Williamson, University of West London“I cannot think of anyone better equipped to take on the challenge of exploring the complex topic of mental health in later life than Alisoun Milne. She combines academic knowledge and research with her roots in social work, her capacity to stimulate critical thinking and her commitment to addressing inequalities and promoting social justice.” Tom Dening, University of NottinghamTable of ContentsForeword by Judith Phillips Introduction Demography, topography and mental health problems in later life Mental health, psychological well-being, successful ageing and quality of life The life course, inequalities and mental health in later life The impact of age-related risks and inequalities on mental health in later life Socio-economic disadvantage and poverty Abuse, mistreatment and neglect The fourth age, frailty and transitions The mental health and well-being of people living with dementia Conceptualising dementia Promotion and prevention Conclusion

    £71.24

  • Active Ageing

    Bristol University Press Active Ageing

    Book SynopsisIn this topical book older people’s volunteering is studied in eight European countries at the structural, macro, meso and micro levels. Overall it highlights how different interactions between the levels facilitate or hinder older people’s inclusion in voluntary work and makes policy suggestions for an integrated strategy.Trade Review“This important book brings a vital new perspective to the global policy priority of active ageing and is highly recommended” Prof Alan Walker, University of SheffieldTable of ContentsPART I: REALISING VOLUNTEERING BY OLDER PEOPLE IN EUROPE: AN OVERARCHING APPROACH; Introduction: enhancing volunteering in later life in Europe ~ Jensen, P.H. and Principi, A.; Volunteering in older age: a conceptual and analytical framework ~ Jensen, P.H., Lamura, G. and Principi, A.; PART II: OPPORTUNITIES AND RESTRICTIONS FOR OLDER VOLUNTEERS: NATIONAL EXPERIENCES; Older volunteers in Italy: an underestimated phenomenon? ~ Principi, A., Chiatti, C. and Lamura, G.; Older volunteers in Denmark: a large voluntary sector in a highly developed welfare state ~ Jensen, P.H.; Older volunteers in Germany: opportunities and restrictions in the welfare mix ~ Aleksandrowicz, P., Bockermann, D. and Frerichs, F.; Older volunteers in England: towards greater flexibility and inclusiveness? ~ Lindley, R., Baldauf, B., Galloway, S. and Li, Y.; Older volunteers in France: recognising their social utility in a less and less corporatist welfare state ~ Poussou-Plesse, M., Mascova, E. and Petit, M; Older volunteers in Poland: the heritage of a socialist regime ~ Turek, K. and Perek Bialas, J.; Older volunteers in Sweden: a welfare state in transition ~ Andersson, P.Å. and Anxo, D.; Older volunteers in the Netherlands: new challenges to an old tradition ~ Schippers, J. and Conen, W.; PART III: OPPORTUNITIES AND RESTRICTIONS FOR OLDER VOLUNTEERS: CASE STUDIES IN EUROPEAN VOLUNTARY ORGANISATIONS; Voluntary organisations’ characteristics and practices towards older volunteers ~ Principi, A. and Perek-Bialas, J.; Organisational reflections on the impact of working and caring on older volunteering ~ Lindley, R. and Principi, A.; Organisations’ age management of volunteers: pointing to the future ~ Schippers, J. and Principi, A.; PART IV: CONCLUSIONS; Conclusions: enhancing volunteering by older people in Europe ~ Principi, A., Lamura G. and Jensen, P.H.

    £77.39

  • Population Ageing from a Lifecourse Perspective

    Bristol University Press Population Ageing from a Lifecourse Perspective

    Book SynopsisThis much-needed volume, part of the Ageing and the Lifecourse series, combines insights from different disciplines and real-life experiences to argue that the lifecourse perspective helps us understand causes and effects of population ageing.Trade Review“The book has a refreshing approach towards the global issue of population ageing, thus stimulating readers to view the phenomenon both from a macro and micro perspective. The authors do an excellent job of linking individual diverse pathways with national developments around the globe.” Kalyani K. Mehta, SIM University, Singapore"Population ageing is a key social issue, yet seldom studied as a lifecourse phenomenon. This comparative contribution fills the gap in the literature." Jani Erola, University of Turku, FinlandTable of ContentsIntroduction ~ Kathrin Komp and Stina Johansson; Part One: Theoretical framework: A demographer’s view: population structures tell a story about lifecourses ~ J. Scott Brown and Scott M. Lynch; A lifecourse scholar’s view: lifecourses crystallise in demographic structures ~ Andreas Motel-Klingebiel; Part Two: Critical perspectives: Generations in ageing Finland: finding your place in the demographic structure ~ Antti Karisto and Ilkka Haapola; Gender in ageing Portugal: following the lives of men and women ~ Karin Wall and Sofia Aboim; Socioeconomic status in ageing Poland: a question of cumulative advantages and disadvantages ~ Konrad Turek, Jolanta Perek-Białas and Justyna Stypińska; Ethnicity in ageing America: a tale of cultures and lifecourse ~ Takashi Yamashita, Timothy S. Melnyk, Jennifer R. Keene, Shannon M. Monnat and Anna C. Smedley; The urban–rural split in ageing Australia: diverging lifecourses, diverging experiences ~ Rachel Winterton and Jeni Warburton; Part Three: Practical implications: The individual in ageing Germany: how the self-employed plan for their old age ~ Annette Franke; Families in ageing Netherlands and ageing China: redefining intergenerational contracts in lengthened lives ~ Fleur Thomese and Zhen Cong; Social care in ageing Sweden: learning from the life stories of care recipients ~ Stina Johansson; The labour market in ageing Sweden: lifecourse influences on workforce participation ~ Mikael Stattin and Daniel Larsson; The state in ageing Canada: from old-age policies to lifecourse policies ~ Kathrin Komp and Patrik Marier; Discussion and conclusion ~ Stina Johansson and Kathrin Komp.

    £75.99

  • The New Science of Ageing

    Bristol University Press The New Science of Ageing

    Book SynopsisThis unique book represents the first multi-disciplinary examination of ageing, from basic cell biology to social participation in later life, drawing on the pioneering New Dynamics of Ageing Programme, the UK’s largest research programme in ageing.Trade Review"This book contains some of the findings from the wide range of topics which were funded under the important NDA programme. They are a tribute to all the researchers involved" Anthea Tinker, Kings College London"An outstanding collection of studies drawn from a major international research programme. Provides a benchmark against which future research into ageing will be measured" Professor Chris Phillipson, University of Manchester, UKTable of ContentsTowards a new science of ageing ~ Alan Walker; Understanding ageing: biological and social perspectives ~ Lynne S. Cox, Penelope A. Mason, Mark C. Bagley, David Steinsaltz, Aneta Stefanovska, Alan Bernjak, Peter V.E. McClintock, Anna C. Phillips, Jane Upton, Joanna E. Latimer and Terence Davis; Understanding and transforming ageing through the arts ~ Michael Murray, David Amigoni, Miriam Bernard, Amanda Crummett, Anna Goulding, Lucy Munro, Andrew Newman, Jill Rezzano, Michelle Rickett, Philip Tew and Lorna Warren; Maintaining health and well-being: overcoming barriers to healthy ageing ~ Sara Arber, Ann Bowling, Andrea Creech, Myanna Duncan, Anna Goulding, Diane Gyi, Susan Hallam, Cheryl Haslam, Aadil Kazi, Liz Lloyd, Janet Lord, MAP2030 team, Mike Murphy, Andrew Newman, Anna C. Phillips, Ricardo Twumasi and Jane Upton; Food environments: from home to hospital ~ Janice L. Thompson, Sheila Peace, Arlene Astell, Paula Moynihan and Alastair Macdonald; Participation and social connectivity ~ Penny Vera-Sanso, Armando Barrientos, Leela Damodaran, Kenneth Gilhooly, Anna Goulding, Catherine Hennessy, Robin Means, Michael Murray, Andrew Newman, Wendy Olphert, Jatinder Sandhu, Philip Tew, Janice L. Thompson, Christina Victor and Nigel Walford Irene di Giulio, Jane McCann, Martin Maguire, Sheila Peace and John Percival; Design for living in later life ~ Mike Timmins, Alastair Macdonald, Constantinos Maganaris, Cheryl Haslam, Diane Gyi, Eleanor van den Heuvel,; A new policy perspective on ageing ~ Alan Walker.

    £86.39

  • The New Science of Ageing

    Bristol University Press The New Science of Ageing

    Book SynopsisThis unique book represents the first multi-disciplinary examination of ageing, from basic cell biology to social participation in later life, drawing on the pioneering New Dynamics of Ageing Programme, the UK’s largest research programme in ageing.Trade Review"This book contains some of the findings from the wide range of topics which were funded under the important NDA programme. They are a tribute to all the researchers involved" Anthea Tinker, Kings College London"An outstanding collection of studies drawn from a major international research programme. Provides a benchmark against which future research into ageing will be measured" Professor Chris Phillipson, University of Manchester, UKTable of ContentsTowards a new science of ageing ~ Alan Walker; Understanding ageing: biological and social perspectives ~ Lynne S. Cox, Penelope A. Mason, Mark C. Bagley, David Steinsaltz, Aneta Stefanovska, Alan Bernjak, Peter V.E. McClintock, Anna C. Phillips, Jane Upton, Joanna E. Latimer and Terence Davis; Understanding and transforming ageing through the arts ~ Michael Murray, David Amigoni, Miriam Bernard, Amanda Crummett, Anna Goulding, Lucy Munro, Andrew Newman, Jill Rezzano, Michelle Rickett, Philip Tew and Lorna Warren; Maintaining health and well-being: overcoming barriers to healthy ageing ~ Sara Arber, Ann Bowling, Andrea Creech, Myanna Duncan, Anna Goulding, Diane Gyi, Susan Hallam, Cheryl Haslam, Aadil Kazi, Liz Lloyd, Janet Lord, MAP2030 team, Mike Murphy, Andrew Newman, Anna C. Phillips, Ricardo Twumasi and Jane Upton; Food environments: from home to hospital ~ Janice L. Thompson, Sheila Peace, Arlene Astell, Paula Moynihan and Alastair Macdonald; Participation and social connectivity ~ Penny Vera-Sanso, Armando Barrientos, Leela Damodaran, Kenneth Gilhooly, Anna Goulding, Catherine Hennessy, Robin Means, Michael Murray, Andrew Newman, Wendy Olphert, Jatinder Sandhu, Philip Tew, Janice L. Thompson, Christina Victor and Nigel Walford Irene di Giulio, Jane McCann, Martin Maguire, Sheila Peace and John Percival; Design for living in later life ~ Mike Timmins, Alastair Macdonald, Constantinos Maganaris, Cheryl Haslam, Diane Gyi, Eleanor van den Heuvel,; A new policy perspective on ageing ~ Alan Walker.

    £29.44

  • The New Dynamics of Ageing Volume 1

    Bristol University Press The New Dynamics of Ageing Volume 1

    Book SynopsisA comprehensive multi-disciplinary overview of the very latest research on ageing, concentrating on three major themes: active ageing, design for ageing well and the relationship between ageing and socio-economic development.Trade Review"The NDA programme established a beacon for addressing the multidisciplinary challenges of ageing. This stimulating collection is delivered with an impressive fusion of clarity and scholarship." Tom Kirkwood CBE, Newcastle University Institute for Ageing"A fascinating and absorbing book which will be of immense value to both professionals and policy makers." Professor James Goodwin PhD, Chief Scientist, Age UK"The strength of 21st-century gerontology lies in its multi-disciplinary approach, evidenced in this book most profoundly. For students and lecturers, as well as age-ambassadors, this edited text offers insights into the research contributions to some of society's most pressing questions." Jill Manthorpe, King's College LondonTable of ContentsIntroduction ~ Alan Walker; Modelling ageing populations to 2030, financing long term care ~ Mike Murphy, Ruth Hancock, Raphael Wittenberg, Bo Hu, Marcello Marciano and Adeline Comas-Heurera; Part 1: Active and healthy ageing; Working Late: Strategies to enhance productive and healthy environments for an older workforce ~ Cheryl Haslam; Healthy ageing across the life course ~ Diana Kuh, Rebecca Hardy, Catharine Gale, Jane Elliot, Yoav Ben-Shlomo, Rachel Cooper and the HALCyon team; Measuring the quality of later life ~ Ann Bowling; Engagement in musical activities ~ Susan Hallam and Andrea Creech; Combating social exclusion through community arts ~ Michael Murray and Amanda Crummett; Connectivity of older people in rural areas ~ Catherin Hagan Hennessy and Robin Means; Part 2: Designing for an older population; Fit For Purpose ~ Leela Damodaran, Wendy Olphert and Jatinder Sandhu; Design for ageing well ~ Jane McCann; Tackling ageing continence ~ Eleanor van der Heuvel; Dynamic biomechanical representations ~ Alistair Macdonald; Transitions in kitchen living ~ Sheila Peace, John Percival, Rachel Sciclune, Martin Maguire, Colette Nicolle, Russ Marshall, Ruth Seins, Clare Lawton and Leonie Kellaher; Negotiating stairs ~ Costantinos Maganaris; Part 3: Global ageing; Ageing, well-being and development: Brazil and South Africa ~ Armando Barrientos, Valerie Møller, João Saboia, Peter Lloyd-Sherlock and Julia Mase; Ageing, poverty and neoliberalism in urban South India ~ Penny Vera-Sanso; Conclusion ~ Alan Walker.

    £75.99

  • The New Dynamics of Ageing Volume 1

    Bristol University Press The New Dynamics of Ageing Volume 1

    Book SynopsisA comprehensive multi-disciplinary overview of the very latest research on ageing, concentrating on three major themes: active ageing, design for ageing well and the relationship between ageing and socio-economic development.Trade Review"The NDA programme established a beacon for addressing the multidisciplinary challenges of ageing. This stimulating collection is delivered with an impressive fusion of clarity and scholarship." Tom Kirkwood CBE, Newcastle University Institute for Ageing"A fascinating and absorbing book which will be of immense value to both professionals and policy makers." Professor James Goodwin PhD, Chief Scientist, Age UK"The strength of 21st-century gerontology lies in its multi-disciplinary approach, evidenced in this book most profoundly. For students and lecturers, as well as age-ambassadors, this edited text offers insights into the research contributions to some of society's most pressing questions." Jill Manthorpe, King's College LondonTable of ContentsIntroduction ~ Alan Walker; Modelling ageing populations to 2030, financing long term care ~ Mike Murphy, Ruth Hancock, Raphael Wittenberg, Bo Hu, Marcello Marciano and Adeline Comas-Heurera; Part 1: Active and healthy ageing; Working Late: Strategies to enhance productive and healthy environments for an older workforce ~ Cheryl Haslam; Healthy ageing across the life course ~ Diana Kuh, Rebecca Hardy, Catharine Gale, Jane Elliot, Yoav Ben-Shlomo, Rachel Cooper and the HALCyon team; Measuring the quality of later life ~ Ann Bowling; Engagement in musical activities ~ Susan Hallam and Andrea Creech; Combating social exclusion through community arts ~ Michael Murray and Amanda Crummett; Connectivity of older people in rural areas ~ Catherin Hagan Hennessy and Robin Means; Part 2: Designing for an older population; Fit For Purpose ~ Leela Damodaran, Wendy Olphert and Jatinder Sandhu; Design for ageing well ~ Jane McCann; Tackling ageing continence ~ Eleanor van der Heuvel; Dynamic biomechanical representations ~ Alistair Macdonald; Transitions in kitchen living ~ Sheila Peace, John Percival, Rachel Sciclune, Martin Maguire, Colette Nicolle, Russ Marshall, Ruth Seins, Clare Lawton and Leonie Kellaher; Negotiating stairs ~ Costantinos Maganaris; Part 3: Global ageing; Ageing, well-being and development: Brazil and South Africa ~ Armando Barrientos, Valerie Møller, João Saboia, Peter Lloyd-Sherlock and Julia Mase; Ageing, poverty and neoliberalism in urban South India ~ Penny Vera-Sanso; Conclusion ~ Alan Walker.

    £26.59

  • Baby Boomers

    Bristol University Press Baby Boomers

    Book SynopsisThis ground-breaking study of the baby boomer generation reflects the intersection of time, ageing, body and identity to give a nuanced and enlightened understanding of the ageing process.Trade Review"An important study of the 'baby boomer' generation, drawing upon an impressive body of scholarship. The study explores some fascinating links between the experiences of this cohort in the 1960s and the shaping of attitudes and identity in later life." Chris Phillipson, University of Manchester"The Baby Boomers revolutionized being young. As time catches up with them they are destined to change what it means to grow older. Woodspring's study gives us a fascinating perspective on what that might look like." Jan Baars, University for Humanistic Studies, The Netherlands"Baby Boomers' variegated dimensions assure its potential, as the cohort comes face to face with advanced ageing and dying, to transform interpersonal relations and societal structures. Naomi Woodspring, a Boomer herself, rethinks the meanings and contexts of time and embodiment in later years. Baby Boomers offered me fresh perspectives." W. Andrew Achenbaum, University of HoustonTable of ContentsIntroduction: the curiosity of ageing body, time, and identity; Kaleidoscopic Sixties; The appearance of time; On time; Body and identity; The past and present converge; The future ; Chiasm, the intersection of time, embodiment, and identity; Time will tell.

    £75.99

  • Personhood Identity and Care in Advanced Old Age

    Bristol University Press Personhood Identity and Care in Advanced Old Age

    Book SynopsisPushing forward new sociological theory, this book explores the theoretical and practical issues raised by ageing, and the associated problems of mental and physical frailty in later life.Trade Review"Offers a critical reflection on the central scientific, practitioner and policy perspectives on the oldest old, and as such addresses one of the key social issues of our time." Kevin McKee, Dalarna University, Sweden"Addresses in a frank, confronting and yet respectful way, the dilemmas faced by all people dealing with advanced old age." Carolien Smits, Windesheim University of Applied Sciences, The NetherlandsTable of ContentsIntroduction; Part 1; Advanced old and the fourth age paradigm; Defining personhood and identity; Understanding frailty; Understanding abjection; Part 2; Cognitive, Emotional and Social Aspects of Caring for Frail Old People; Organisational and Policy Aspects of Caring for Frail Old People; Carework and bodywork; Care and the Limits of Personhood; Conclusion.

    £75.99

  • Intimacy and Ageing

    Policy Press Intimacy and Ageing

    Book SynopsisThis timely book, part of the Ageing in a Global Context series, addresses the gap in knowledge about late life repartnering and provides a comprehensive map of the changing landscape of late life intimacy.Trade Review"At last, an account of ageing intimacy that blows away stereotypes to engage with the complexities. A must-read for academics and those working with older people." Dr Paul Simpson, Edge Hill UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction; Intimacy and ageing in late modernity; The changing landscape of intimacy in later life; From marriage to alternative union forms; A life of relationships; Attitudes towards new romantic relationships; Initiation and development of new romantic relationships; A new partner as a resource for social support; Consequences for social network and support structures; Sex in an ideology of love; Time as a structuring condition for new intimate relationships in later life; Discussion; Methodological Appendix.

    £77.39

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