ABSTRACT

Understanding where ageing occurs, how it is experienced by different people in different places, and in what ways it is transforming our communities, economies and societies at all levels has become crucial for the development of informed research, policy and programmes.

This book focuses on the interdisciplinary field of study – geographical gerontology – that addresses these issues. With contributions from more than 30 leading geographers and gerontologists, the book examines the scope and depth of geographical perspectives, concepts and approaches applied to the study of ageing, old age and older populations. The book features 25 chapters organized into five parts that cover the field’s theoretical traditions and intellectual evolution; the contributions of key disciplinary perspectives from population geography, social and cultural geography, health geography, urban planning and environmental studies; the scales of inquiry within geographical gerontology from the global to the embodied; the thematic breadth of contemporary issues of interest that define the field (places, spaces and landscapes of ageing); and a discussion about challenges, opportunities and agendas for future developments in geography and gerontology.

This book provides the first comprehensive foundation of knowledge about the state of the art of geographical gerontology that will be of interest to scholars of ageing around the world.

part 1I|28 pages

Introduction

part 29II|62 pages

Geographical perspectives on ageing

part 91III|95 pages

Geographical scales of inquiry

chapter 8|17 pages

Global ageing

chapter 9|13 pages

Ageing in low- and middle-income countries

Ageing against all odds

chapter 10|13 pages

Urban ageing

New agendas for geographical gerontology

chapter 11|13 pages

Rural ageing

Contested spaces, dynamic places

chapter 12|13 pages

Ageing communities

chapter 13|12 pages

Household spaces of ageing

When care comes home

chapter 14|12 pages

Embodiment and emotion in later life

Ageing from the inside out

part 187IV|117 pages

Key issues in geographical gerontology

chapter 16|13 pages

Being in place

Identity and place attachment in late life

chapter 19|11 pages

Mobilities and ageing

“We’re quite outgoing people”

chapter 20|15 pages

Constructions of old-age social exclusion

In place and shaped by place

chapter 21|14 pages

Employed caregivers in the ageing family

Conceptualising respite as an embodied space of resistance

chapter 22|12 pages

Ageing landscapes

Real and imagined

chapter 23|11 pages

Therapeutic landscapes of ageing

part 305V|15 pages

Discussion