Rapid fertility declines and improved longevity are now shifting the overall balance of population towards older ages in many parts of the world. Within this growing population of older people there are many groups with particular needs about which relatively little is known. This collection focuses on one such sub-population, the elderly without children. Few would deny that childlessness poses potential human and welfare problems for older people without them. What is less well known is that comparative anthropological and historical demographic research indicates that childlessness is a recurring social phenomenon that has affected 1 in 5 older women in many cultures and historical periods. High levels of childlessness arise not solely or primarily from biological factors like primary sterility, but from a combination of actors. Many, like non-marriage, delayed childbearing , and pathological sterility, reflect the interaction of social and biological influences.
Also of major importance are factors that remove the support of children from elders’ lives: migration, mortality, divorce, remarriage, family enmity, social mobility, and the pressing demands of family and career on younger generations. The papers collected in this volume employ a mixture of quantitative and qualitative methods to define and characterize the experience of ageing without children.
Содержание
List of Figures
List of Tables
Foreword
Chapter 1. Where are the Children?
Philip Kreager
PART I: ASIA
Chapter 2. Problems of Elderly without Children: A Case-study of the Matrilineal Minangkabau, West Sumatra
Edi Indrizal
Chapter 3. ‘They Don’t Need It, and I Can’t Give It’: Filial Support in South India
Penny Vera-Sanso
Chapter 4. Adoption, Patronage and Charity: Arrangements for the Elderly without Children in East Java
Elisabeth Schröder-Butterfill
Chapter 5. In the Absence of Family Support: Cases of Childless Widows in Urban Neighbourhoods of East Java
Ruly Marianti
PART II: EUROPE
Chapter 6. Demographic Change in Europe: Implications for Future Family Support for Older People
Maria Evandrou and Jane Falkingham
Chapter 7. British Pakistani Elderly without Children: An Invisible Minority
Alison Shaw
Chapter 8. Home-place, Movement and Autonomy: Rural Aged in East Anglia and Normandy
Judith Okely
Chapter 9. The Position of the Elderly in Greece Prior to the Second World War: Evidence from Three Island Populations
Violetta Hionidou
Notes on Contributors
Index
Об авторе
Elisabeth Schröder-Butterfill is Lecturer in Gerontology at the University of Southampton.