Our population is aging. What will we do about it?
Due to population explosion and a global increase in average life expectancies, an unprecedentedly high percentage of the world′s population is aging. By the middle of this century there will be up to 2 billion individuals over the age of 65, a demographic shift never before experienced in our human history. In addition, declining birth rates in industrialized countries means a decrease in the number of adults under 64. In Aging Social Policies: An International Perspective the authors consider how policy – domestic and international – affects and will continue to affect the lives of our aging population.
İçerik tablosu
Part I: THE CONTEXT OF AGING SOCIAL POLICY
1. Our Aging Societies – The Setting for Aging Social Policy
2. The Aging Social Policy Process
PART II: AGING SOCIAL POLICY COMPARISONS
3. Retirement Income
4. Employment
5. Housing
6. Health Care
7. Mental Health Care
8. Community Resources
9. Family Care
PART III: THE FUTURE OF AGING SOCIAL POLICY
10. Aging Social Policy Challenges
References
About the Author
Yazar hakkında
Karen A. Roberto, Ph.D., is the Director of the Center for Gerontology, Founding Director of the Institute of Society, Culture, and Environment, and Professor of Human Development at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. She also holds adjunct appointments in the Departments of Internal Medicine and Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine at the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine. She has published over 150 scholarly articles and book chapters, is the editor/author of ten books, and has earned numerous university and professional awards, including the Gerontological Society of America Behavioral and Social Science Distinguished Mentorship in Gerontology Award