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Long Lives Are for the Rich - Aging, the Life Course, and Social Justice (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,291
Discovery Miles 42 910
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Long Lives Are for the Rich - Aging, the Life Course, and Social Justice (Hardcover)
Series: Aging and Society
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Long Lives Are for the Rich is the title of a silent ominous
program that affects the lives of millions of people. In all
developed countries disadvantaged and, especially, poor people die
much earlier than the most advantaged. During these shorter lives
they suffer ten to twenty years longer from disabilities or chronic
disease. This does not happen accidentally: health inequalities –
including those between healthy and unhealthy life styles – are
mainly caused by social inequalities that are reproduced over the
life course. This crucial function of the life course has become
painfully visible during its neoliberal reorganization since the
early 1980s. Studies about aging over the life course, from birth
to death, show the inhumane consequences as people get older. In
spite of the enormous wealth that has been piled up in the US for a
dwindling percentage of the population, there has been growing
public indifference about the needs of those in jobs with low pay
and high stress, but also about citizens from a broad middle class
who can hardly afford high quality education or healthcare.
However, this ominous program affects all: recent mortality rates
show that all Americans, including the rich, are unhealthier and
dying earlier than citizens of other developed countries. Moreover,
the underlying social inequalities are tearing the population apart
with nasty consequences for all citizens, including the rich.
Although the public awareness of the consequences has been growing,
neoliberal policies remain tempting for the economic and political
elites of the developed world because of the enormous wealth that
is flowing to the top. All this poses urgent questions of social
justice. Unfortunately, the predominant studies of social justice
along the life course help to reproduce these inequalities by
neglecting them. This book analyzes the main dynamics of social
inequality over the life course and proposes a theory of social
justice that sketches a way forward for a country that is willing
to invest in its greatest resource: the creative potential of its
population.
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