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Aging in Comparative Perspective : Processes and Policies / by Ian Gillespie Cook, Jamie Halsall.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries International Perspectives on Aging ; 1Editor: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2012Descripción: viii, 94 páginas 2 ilustraciones recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9781461419785
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • HQ1060-1064
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Chapter 1: Introduction: An Aging World -- Chapter 2: Aging in the United States -- Chapter 3: Aging in the UK -- Chapter 4: Aging in Sweden -- Chapter 5: Aging in Japan -- Chapter 6: Aging in China -- Chapter 7: Aging in Nepal -- Chapter 8: Aging in South Africa -- Chapter 9: Lessons to be Learned.
Resumen: Aging in Comparative Perspective Processes and Policies   Ian G. Cook and Jamie Halsall     People are living longer—in particular, the over-85 population is increasing in many countries around the globe. But while this fact should be considered a proud testament to improved standards of living, it is often lost in contentious debates over the state of health care and the future of benefit programs.   Aging in Comparative Perspective explores this complex scenario on a world scale, as the global recession drives political change and shifts in cultural traditions. This timely volume analyzes the aging process in various countries, with special focus on the stresses placed on their economies as the numbers of elders increase with fewer young people available to support them due to declining birthrates. The authors review elder policies, such as entitlement programs, that have been put into place, are being considered, or are in danger of being curtailed. At the same time, helpful light is shed on another side of the elderly that receives less attention: active, independent, and benefiting their families and communities. This ongoing evolution is presented in national and global context in seven representative countries: U.S., U.K., Japan, Sweden, China, South Africa, and Nepal.   Aging in Comparative Perspective makes a major contribution to our understanding of the wider impact of growing old, and will find interested readers among gerontologists, sociologists, public health policymakers, and anthropologists.
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Springer eBooks

Chapter 1: Introduction: An Aging World -- Chapter 2: Aging in the United States -- Chapter 3: Aging in the UK -- Chapter 4: Aging in Sweden -- Chapter 5: Aging in Japan -- Chapter 6: Aging in China -- Chapter 7: Aging in Nepal -- Chapter 8: Aging in South Africa -- Chapter 9: Lessons to be Learned.

Aging in Comparative Perspective Processes and Policies   Ian G. Cook and Jamie Halsall     People are living longer—in particular, the over-85 population is increasing in many countries around the globe. But while this fact should be considered a proud testament to improved standards of living, it is often lost in contentious debates over the state of health care and the future of benefit programs.   Aging in Comparative Perspective explores this complex scenario on a world scale, as the global recession drives political change and shifts in cultural traditions. This timely volume analyzes the aging process in various countries, with special focus on the stresses placed on their economies as the numbers of elders increase with fewer young people available to support them due to declining birthrates. The authors review elder policies, such as entitlement programs, that have been put into place, are being considered, or are in danger of being curtailed. At the same time, helpful light is shed on another side of the elderly that receives less attention: active, independent, and benefiting their families and communities. This ongoing evolution is presented in national and global context in seven representative countries: U.S., U.K., Japan, Sweden, China, South Africa, and Nepal.   Aging in Comparative Perspective makes a major contribution to our understanding of the wider impact of growing old, and will find interested readers among gerontologists, sociologists, public health policymakers, and anthropologists.

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