Toward a Sociological Definition of Old Age: A Research Note

1953 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-29
Author(s):  
Edward Nelson Palmer
Keyword(s):  
Old Age ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda Grenier ◽  
Igor Gontcharov ◽  
Karen Kobayashi ◽  
Equity Burke

ABSTRACT The concept of knowledge mobilization (KMb) is prominent in governance frameworks of tri-council funding in Canada. Yet there are a number of conceptual and practical challenges when such ideas are proposed for adoption across large multidisciplinary contexts. This research note introduces the concept of critical knowledge mobilization as a way to understand KMb in large multidisciplinary teams and social gerontology. It begins with a high-level sketch of the historic changes in knowledge production and knowledge sharing, followed by a definition of critical knowledge mobilization and examples of historical ideas and everyday tensions in practice. Building on these, we propose the need to advance and shift the culture of KMb, and to embark on engaged research as a means of innovation. We suggest that a reflexive process of critical KMb can facilitate innovation and promote a culture of knowledge mobilization in Canadian social gerontology.


1948 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-56
Author(s):  
M. E. Ogborn

(1) The proper method of taxation of annuities has been a subject of contention for many years, and it seems a suitable time to discuss what are the correct principles to be applied.(2) It seems illogical that life annuities should be taxed on a different principle from annuities payable for a fixed period not dependent on life. It also seems wrong that, whereas a person who has saved capital on which to live in old age may draw on the capital from time to time without being taxed on it, the same person if he buys an annuity so as to equalize the payments throughout the remainder of life has to pay tax on the capital content of the annuity.(3) Various methods(1) have been devised in other countries as practical measures giving some allowance for the capital content of annuity payments, but those methods that I have seen suffer to my mind from being founded on arbitrary rules rather than on principle. It should be noted that the practice of each country is bound up with the definition of taxable income and the treatment of wasting assets in that country. In Great Britain it is possible so to word an annuity contract that part of the annuity is not taxable, but personally I think the question of principle should be faced, and not avoided by rewriting the contracts in some other form.


1982 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith H. Fox

This paper explores the strengths and limitations of the continuity perspective on aging. First, current usages of the concept are delineated. Then available literature is reviewed for evidence that continuity is in fact characteristic of the aging process and for indications that it is positively related to morale in old age. While lack of comparable data makes conclusions somewhat tentative, it appears that discontinuity is as characteristic of aging as continuity and that continuity may actually be maladaptive in many cases. Components of a conceptual definition of continuity are discussed, and suggestions are made for operationalization and more rigorous investigation of the concept.


2006 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Watson ◽  
W. Leslie ◽  
C. Hankey

A recent international definition of under-nutrition or malnutrition has been given by the WHO. Mal-nutrition means ‘badly nourished’ but it is more than a measure of what we eat, or fail to eat. Clinically, malnutrition is characterized by inadequate intake of protein, energy, and micronutri-ents and by susceptibility to infection or disease. Nutritional status is the result of the complex interaction between the food we eat, our overall state of health, and the environment in which we live – in short, food, health and caring are the three ‘pillars of well-being’.


2000 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shahid Amjad Chaudhry

Definitions and Sources Definitions: In this paper it is proposed to use the definition of selfemployed, small scale (2-9 employees), medium scale (10-99 employees) and large scale (100 employees and above) to discuss the issues relating to the Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) sector in Pakistan. The national pension (regulated through the Employees Old Age Benefit Institution Legislation) and health insurance (The Provincial Social Security Institutions Legislation) is applicable to institutions with 10 or more employees and provides a natural cut off point between the small scale and medium and large scale sectors. The cut off between the medium and large scale at 100 workers is also appropriate.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalie Welfens ◽  
Yasemin Bekyol

Resettlement and humanitarian admission programs claim to target ‘particularly vulnerable’, or ‘the most vulnerable’ refugees. If the limited spots of such programs are indeed foreseen for particularly vulnerable groups and individuals, as resettlement actors claim, how is vulnerability defined in policies and put into practice at the frontline? Taking European states’ recent admission programs under the EU-Turkey statement as an example, and focusing on Germany as an admission country, this research note sheds light on this question. Drawing on document analysis, and original fieldwork insights, we show that on paper and in practice vulnerability as a policy category designates some social groups as per se more vulnerable than others, rather than accounting for contingent reasons of vulnerability. In policy documents, the operational definition of vulnerability and its relation to other criteria remain largely undefined. In selection practices, additional criteria curtail a purely vulnerability-based selection, exacerbate existing or create new vulnerabilities in their own right. We conclude that, in the absence of clear definitions, resettlement and humanitarian admission programs’ declared focus on the most vulnerable remains a discretionary promise, with limited possibilities of political and legal scrutiny.


Author(s):  
Jason L. Powell

This article explores the concept of ‘risk’ in relation to the theoretical study of old age and welfare in Europe. Ideas related with what has been conceptualised as the ‘risk society’ (Beck, 1992) have, it might be argued, become part of the organising ground of how we define and position the ‘personal’ and ‘social spaces’ in which to grow old. This has startling continuities across Europe. These spaces have served to place the definition of what it means to be an older person – shifts from state care to individualised care (Phillipson and Powell, 2004). As Ulrich Beck (1992) claims, in the conditions of advanced modernity, growing old moves from being a collective to an individual experience and responsibility.


2020 ◽  
pp. 211-216
Author(s):  
Edmund Jessop ◽  
Martin Gulliford

Demographic change and economic constraints are likely to drive change in healthcare systems over the next few decades. It seems inevitable that both the amount and the shape of healthcare systems will be stretched by increasing numbers of old people, even as the definition of ‘old age’ is itself stretched. Concepts of ‘disease’ may need to change; such changes will need to be mirrored in coding systems. As healthcare becomes more specialized, pathways become more complex. This will disadvantage people who lack the cognitive, physical, and financial resources to navigate complex systems. Specialists in healthcare public health will need to adapt their knowledge, skills, and attitudes.


Author(s):  
Sharon Ost Mor ◽  
Yuval Palgi ◽  
Dikla Segel-Karpas

This paper attempts to develop a better understanding of the positive solitude (PS) phenomenon and its meaning among age groups, as well as formulate a unanimous definition for PS. A qualitative study ( N = 124) was conducted. Participants were gerontology professionals and laypeople. Interviews were conducted and content was analyzed in order to understand the essence of PS, themes, and subthemes. Two major categories were found: the essence and the components of the PS experience. Seven PS content categories and three meta-themes were raised: (1) PS is a matter of choice; (2) PS is satisfying and enjoyable; and (3) PS is meaningful. Differences in PS categories between younger and older adults were found. The meta-themes served as the foundation of a new definition. PS has different attributes in old age. A unified definition of PS may help distinguishing between PS and other forms of being alone. Recognizing and facilitating the PS experience among older adults might be beneficial and contribute to their quality of life.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (1-2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicola Carpentieri

AbstractThis paper explores representations of old age in the poetry of Ibn Ḥamdīs (444–527/1056–1133 CE). It shows how the poet, while adhering to a codified aesthetics, creatively reworked specific sub-genres of the “qaṣīda” into a personal ‘poetics of ageing’. It is my contention that Ibn Ḥamdīs built such a poetics on binary constructions which parallel bodily deterioration with the collapse of social cohesion and the political decline of Islam in the West. The first part of the paper focuses on form. I discuss Ibn Ḥamdīs’ usage of the theme of “aš-šayb wa ’š-šabāb” within a multipartite ode, showing how, according to an established tradition, the poet used canonical motifs of old age poetry as transitional segments, enhancing the poem’s conceptual unity. The second part of the paper focuses on selected verses of nostalgia for the homeland (“al-ḥanīn ilà ’l-awṭān”), elegies (“riṯāʽ”) and ascetic poems (“zuhd”). These sub-genres are read in conjunction in order to formulate a preliminary definition of Ibn Ḥamdīs’ own ‘poetics of ageing’.


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