ABSTRACT

Family life has changed rapidly over te past fifty years and the number of people living longer increases year on year Family and Community Life of Older People revisits three areas (Bethnal Green in London, Wolverhampton in the Midlands and Woodford in Essex) which were the subject of classic studies in the late 1940s and 1950s and explores changes to the family and community lives of older people. The book examines issues such as:
*changes in household composition
*changes in the geographical proximity of kin and relatives
*the extent and type of help provided by the family
*contact and relationships with neighbours
*relationships with friends
*involvement in social and leisure activities
*experiences of minority ethnic groups.
These questions are explored through a unique set of data including census material, and survey data from interviews with over 600 older people. A key finding is that over the past 50 years we have moved from an old age experienced within the context of the family group to one shaped by personal communities in which friends may feature as significantly as immediate kin and relatives.
Family and Community Life of Older People is a major contribution to the sociology of the family, of ageing, and of urban life and points up the social policy issues for an ageing society.

part 1|51 pages

Background to the research

chapter 1|17 pages

Growing old

Other pasts; other places

chapter 3|17 pages

The social context of ageing

Community, locality and urbanisation

part 2|80 pages

Empirical findings

chapter 5|37 pages

Growing old in urban communities

chapter 6|15 pages

Social support in late life

The role of family and friends

part 3|116 pages

Issues and concerns

chapter 7|26 pages

Managing support in old age

chapter 8|26 pages

Ties that bind

Relationships across the generations

chapter 10|20 pages

The social world of older people

The experience of retirement and leisure

part 4|17 pages

Conclusion

chapter 11|15 pages

From family groups to personal communities

Social capital and social change in old age