1st Edition

Advancing Aging Policy as the 21st Century Begins

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    234 Pages
    by Routledge

    By the end of the current decade, many baby boomers will be senior citizens. What policies should we enact to prepare for an aging society?

    In the coming decade, we have a unique opportunity to create new and better aging policies. This collection of twenty essays by prominent educators, researchers, and policy analysts in the field of gerontology brings together innovative ideas from the United States, Europe, and Japan.

    Instead of focusing on utopian dreams, these exciting proposals are based on policy changes that may well be attainable in the next ten years. The vital concerns addressed in Advancing Aging Policy as the 21st Century Begins include work and retirement issues, the aging prison population, long-term care, Latino elders, transportation, death and dying issues, and the aging of the baby boom generation.

    Advancing Aging Policy as the 21st Century Begins explores:

    • innovative policies and care arrangements around the world
    • the importance of a strong economy that provides opportunities for seniors who seek them and support for those who need it
    • the need for flexible retirement and employment policies for older adults
    • the connections between family policy and aging policy
    • the importance of improving training and compensation for workers in long-term care
    • the special needs of our diverse and rapidly growing population of older people
    • the importance of focusing aging policy on people rather than on programs

      This forward-looking book on policy and aging in the coming decade puts the experience and insight of leaders in the field from around the world in your hands. Policymakers, educators, and students of gerontology will find it an invaluable resource.

    Contents
    • Introduction
    • Advancing Aging Policy as the 21st Century Begins
    • Overview
    • Emergence of the Third Age: Toward a Productive Aging Society
    • The Politics of Near-Term Action to Deal with the Aging of the Baby Boom
    • Towards a Society for All Ages
    • The Elderly's Future Stake in Voluntary Associations
    • Employment and Retirement
    • Gradual Retirement in Europe
    • Increasing Life Expectancy, Retirement Age, and Pension Reform in the German Context
    • “The Full Monty” and Life-Long Learning in the 21st Century
    • An Aging Workforce in an Increasingly Global World
    • Long Term Care
    • Continuing Care Retirement Communities and Efficiency in the Financing of Long-Term Care
    • A Special Consumer Cooperative Association Nursing Home
    • The Chronic Care Paradox
    • Who Will Care for Mother Tomorrow?
    • Uneasy Allies: Nursing Home Regulators and Consumer Advocates
    • End of Life
    • The Future of Physician-Assisted Suicide
    • Dying and Social Policy in the New Millennium
    • Economic Security
    • The Continuing Gender Gap in Later Life Economic Security
    • Aging Prisoners
    • The Elderly and Prison Policy
    • Latino Elders
    • Policy Development and the Older Latino Population in the 21st Century
    • Family Medical Leave
    • Time Not Yet Money: The Politics and Promise of the Family Medical Leave Act
    • Transportation
    • How Will We Get There from Here? Placing Transportation on the Aging Policy Agenda
    • Index
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Francis G Caro, Jill Norton, Robert Morris *Deceased*