ABSTRACT

This chapter and Chapter 6 present institutional case studies from England and Japan respectively. The effects of their national legislation and policy goals on grassroots practices and residents’ lives within each region since 1948 are examined, focusing on qualitative aspects from the residents’ and carers’ perspectives. Each chapter has two sections. The first covers the period 1948−73 and investigates a former workhouse or almshouse and its replacement. The history of the selected institutions is reviewed, drawing on archival and local records. The first section therefore examines the extent to which a ‘homely’ home and improvements in residential life and practice have been achieved. This reveals the extent to which the Poor Law legacy, stigma, and pre-war measures and mentalities have survived. These are considered by examining the environment, amenities and services, as well as staffing and care standards. Acknowledging the greater diversity in residential care for subsequent decades, the second section provides a more dynamic and complex institutional history since 1980, by exploring various long-term institutional care locations in each region, drawing on in-depth interviews with residents or patients, their relatives and staff.