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Contents: 1.Introduction 2.The Change: Challenges and Opportunities Gill Granville 3 Working Women: Paid and Unpaid Carers Judith Phillips and Sandra J McIsaac 4.Something for Me: Women Aged 50 Plus in Higher Education Patsy Marshall 5 Our Ageing Selves: Midlife Professionals Reflect on Growing Older Val Davies and Miriam Bernard 6.From Pin Money to Needlepoint Miriam Bernard and Julie Skucha 7 Widowhood in Later Life Pat Chambers 8.Love and Romance in Later Life Julia Ryan 9.Older Women, Long-term Marriage and Care Mo Ray 10.Loss and Change: Women's Experience of Grief Linda Machin 11.Conclusion
Women and Ageing provides a better understanding of what ageing is like for women and challenges the myths which have grown up around the ageing process. Blending the scholarly, the personal and the political, it reveals the range of strategies and identities women adopt to manage the transitions of the second half of the lifecourse. In doing so it uncovers not only the commonalities and similarities between mid-life and older women, but also some of the variation and diversity relating to ethnicity and race, class, disability and sexual orientation. Women Ageing makes ordinary lives of ordinary women, as, in this instance, they grow older, more visible. Its findings have important implications for policy and practice. All those studying or working with older people, will find it an illuminating text.
Southwestern Landscaping with Native Plants has been the
inspiration for tens of thousands of gardeners facing the
challenging winds, soils, and droughts of low- and high-desert
gardens. A perennial gardener's favorite, this guide -- now with 55
new color photographs and an all-new appendix of adapted plants --
is the classic resource for reaping the rewards of landscaping with
native and adaptive plants that will make a success of any
gardening effort. This book breaks down the often-daunting task of
creating a garden into easy steps, from site analysis through
design, plant selection, propagation, and maintenance. Everything
necessary for understanding -- and enjoying -- a garden is here in
this guide.
Landscape gardening involves a partnership between gardener and
environment and an understanding of why and how plants grow where
they do. Phillips takes the reader on an illustrated garden tour
through the rich ecosystems of the Southwest and into gardens she
has designed in the upland forests, shrub/desert grasslands,
riparian oases, and arid city plots. Her plant palette includes
native trees, shrubs, wildflowers, and grasses, and embraces dozens
of adaptive plants that will flourish in the demanding conditions
of the upland and desert West.
This companion book to 'Natural by Design' concentrates on over two
hundred plants, individually photographed and profiled. The key to
any successful garden is knowing the plants, the conditions that
nurture them, and the care that must be taken in their propagation,
cultivation, transplanting, and pruning. Knowing the native and
adaptive plants of the region and how best to use them in the
landscape will enable the gardener to create gardens of
self-sustaining beauty.
The book explores central issues such as power, group goals, and
the effects of the environment. It uses as its reference base both
the published literature and examples from case eight studies of
groups run by people from different professional backgrounds... The
discussion of the power relationship between different members of
the group is particularly welcome: user empowerment has become a
neglected area of concern in books on groupwork... For those new to
the field, this is well worth a read.' - Mental Health Today 'The
book includes some insightful material on the need for greater
flexibility in service provision. The book is valuable for pointing
out how much more research and development is still required.' -
Age and Ageing 'This book should be of considerable interest to
social and health practitioners and policy makers.' - Ageing and
Society 'The key question this text addresses is the
appropriateness of community care for elderly people in this
country in the 1990s and beyond... This is a book which provides a
wealth of material drawn from analysis of research and practice. It
seeks not primarily to provide answers, but to articulate the
central questions which point the way to the future agenda for
research.' - Community Care 'This volume achieves two essential
requirements of a worthwhile read - it is informative, and it makes
you think. It is realistic, and well in touch with what is
happening in the field. It expresses a range of doubts and
concerns, but is nevertheless cautiously optimistic for the future,
as long as resources are found.' - Policy Studies Care management
for people with dementia has been the subject of much scrutiny
since the introduction of the community care legislation. The
development and implementation of several models of care management
are discussed in this volume. Drawing together research to
highlight the successes and the difficulties of translating the
principles of care management into practice, it examines this
subject with particular reference to: empowerment; needs-led
assessment; and multi-disciplinary work. The book investigates the
extent to which care management, with its emphasis on user choice
and participation can be successfully applied to older people and
their carers, and identifies key areas for further research and
development in the field.
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