Description
Book SynopsisIn society at large, lives have been drastically altered over this century--as a consequence of increased longevity, advances in science and education, the gender revolution, improvements in public health, and other historical trends and events--but numerous inflexible social structures, roles, and norms have lagged behind. There is a mismatch or imbalance between the transformation of the aging process from birth to death and the role opportunities or places in the social structure that could foster and reward people at the various stages of their lives. While the twentieth century has experienced a revolution in human development and aging, there has been no comparable revolution in the role structures of society to keep pace with the changes in the ways people grow up and grow old. The lag involves not only institutional and organizational arrangements, but also the many aspects of culture that, in addition to being internalized by people, are built into role expectations and societ
Table of ContentsPartial table of contents:
THE DILEMMA OF STRUCTURAL LAG.
Structural Lag: Past and Future (M. Riley & J. Riley).
Opportunities, Aspirations, and Goodness of Fit (R. Kahn).
DIRECTIONS OF CHANGE.
Social Structure and Age-Based Careers (J. Henretta).
Work and Retirement: A Comparative Perspective (M. Kohli).
Family Change and Historical Change: An Uneasy Relationship (T.Hareven).
Old Age and Age Integration: An Anthropological Perspective (J.Keith).
CURRENT INTERVENTIONS: OLDER WORKERS.
Realizing the Potential: Some Examples (W. McNaught).
Changing Policy Signals (R. Burkhauser & J. Quinn).
Endnote: The Reach of an Idea (A. Foner).
Indexes.