ABSTRACT

Ageing populations have gradually become a major concern in many industrialised countries over the past fifty years, drawing the attention of both politics and science. The target of a raft of health and social policies, older people are often identified as a specific, and vulnerable, population. At the same time, ageing has become a specialisation in many disciplines - medicine, sociology, psychology, to name but three – and a discipline of its own: gerontology.

This book questions the framing of old age by focusing on the relationships between policy making and the production of knowledge. The first part explores how the meeting of scientific expertise and the politics of old age anchors the construction of both individual and collective relationships to the future. Part II brings to light the many ways in which issues relating to ageing can be instrumentalised and ideologised in several public debate arenas. Part III argues that scientific knowledge itself composes with objectivity, bringing ideologies of its own to the table, and looks at how this impacts discourse about ageing. In the final part, the contributors discuss how the frames can themselves be experienced at different levels of the division of labour, whether it is by people who work on them (legislators or scientists), by people working with them (professional carers) or by older people themselves.

Unpacking the political and moral dimensions of scientific research on ageing, this cutting-edge volume brings together a range of multidisciplinary, European perspectives, and will be of use to all those interested in old age and the social sciences.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Contested knowledge of ageing Stepping out to frame the larger picture

part I|60 pages

Future at the heart of the ageing region

chapter 1|26 pages

Demographic change as dystopia

Contemporary German discourses on ageing, between science and politics

chapter 3|17 pages

‘Regimes of hope’ in planning later life

Medical optimism in the field of anti-ageing medicine

part II|52 pages

Defining boundaries, defining insiders and outsiders

part III|58 pages

Bridges between science and policy

chapter 7|18 pages

Connecting categories

Age, gender and archaeologies of knowledge

chapter 8|17 pages

The breakdown of consensus on pro-natalist policies

Media discourse, social research and a new demographic agreement

part IV|50 pages

Experiencing, playing, shifting boundaries

chapter 10|15 pages

Discerning ageing in relation to the law?

Debates on the legal framework of freedom of movement of the elderly in France between 2004 and 2015

chapter 11|18 pages

Different initial training, different professional practices?

Latitude and interprofessionality in dependency assessment

chapter 12|14 pages

Shaping old age

Innovation partnerships, senior centres and billiards tables as active ageing technologies