|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Public discussion of population aging usually focuses on the
financial burden that increasingly elderly populations will impose
on younger generations. Scholars give much less attention to who
does the actual work of day-to-day care for those no longer able to
care for themselves; and although women are the majority among the
elderly, little is heard about gender differences in economic
resources or the need for care. This volume is dedicated to giving
gender -and a full range of social and cultural differences-their
rightful place in these discussions. The authors in the following
pages address, among other issues:
* the worldwide dilemmas of eldercare
* the structure of income and care provisions for older
populations
* the role of family, marital status, and class in these
provisions
* the impact of polices affecting retirement age
* and the role of social insurance in preventing poverty among
elderly women
The essays included address these topics in a myriad of
geographical contexts, including South Africa, the US, Palestine,
Australia, South Korea, Spain, Germany, and Sweden. The concerns
highlighted here also remind us that whether through individual
families or social insurance, through family caregivers or paid
help, the oldest generation will continue to depend on adults of
working age for its well-being. This book was previously published
as a special issue of Feminist Economics.
Public discussion of population aging usually focuses on the
financial burden that increasingly elderly populations will impose
on younger generations. Scholars give much less attention to who
does the actual work of day-to-day care for those no longer able to
care for themselves; and although women are the majority among the
elderly, little is heard about gender differences in economic
resources or the need for care. This volume is dedicated to giving
gender - and a full range of social and cultural differences -
their rightful place in these discussions. The authors address,
amongst other issues: the worldwide dilemmas of eldercare the
structure of income and care provisions for older populations the
role of family, marital status, and class in these provisions the
impact of polices affecting retirement age the role of social
insurance in preventing poverty among elderly women. The essays
included address these topics in a myriad of geographical contexts,
including South Africa, the US, Palestine, Australia, South Korea,
Spain, Germany, and Sweden. The concerns highlighted here also
remind us that whether through individual families or social
insurance, through family caregivers or paid help, the oldest
generation will continue to depend on adults of working age for its
well-being. This book was previously published as a special issue
of Feminist Economics.
|
You may like...
Ambulance
Jake Gyllenhaal, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, …
DVD
(1)
R93
Discovery Miles 930
Wonka
Timothee Chalamet
Blu-ray disc
R250
Discovery Miles 2 500
|