ISBN:
9783030714420
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource(VI, 189 p. 2 illus.)
Edition:
1st ed. 2021.
Series Statement:
Life Course Research and Social Policies 13
Series Statement:
Springer eBook Collection
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
Keywords:
Demography.
;
Population.
;
Emigration and immigration.
;
Political science.
;
Life cycle, Human.
;
Demographie
;
Bevölkerungsentwicklung
;
Alternde Bevölkerung
;
Migration
;
Einwanderung
;
Auswanderung
;
Wohlfahrtsstaat
;
Familienpolitik
;
Altenpolitik
Abstract:
Introduction -- Part 1: Support and Care of Immigrants Ageing in Place -- 1. Migration, transnational ties and intergenerational support: constructions of home and family life -- 2.Invisible old age: ethnography of a soup kitchen in Switzerland -- 3.Between care and contract: ageing immigrants, self-appointed helpers and ambiguous belonging in the Danish welfare state -- 4.Contexts of migration, integration and welfare configurations: The case of Romanian older migrants in Switzerland -- 5.Care of elderly parents in transnational families -- Part 2: Migration as a Response to Support and Care Challenges of Ageing -- 6. Dependence and Retirement Migration: The Importance of Inequalities -- 7.Linked lives, dividing borders: From transnational solidarity to family reunification of an older parent -- 8.Anticipating retirement in the context of migration: The case of Peruvians in Switzerland -- 9.Elders moving between Turkey and Germany -- 10. Migration and the welfare state’s life-course model in the Global North: A Swiss illustration -- 11.Migrantship in a public debate on elder care: making sense of media representations with the ethics of care lens -- Conclusion.
Abstract:
This book brings together two major trends influencing economic and social life: population ageing on the one side, and migration on the other. Both have assumed increasing importance over the course of the 20th and into the 21st century. The book offers a unique interdisciplinary perspective on the challenges posed by the globalisation of the life course to welfare states’ old age and family policies. Through a variety of case studies, it covers a wide range of migration scenarios: those who migrate in later life; migrants from earlier years who age in place; and old people who hire migrant caregivers. It shows how both local and global economic inequalities intersect to frame interactions between ageing, migration, and family support. Across a wide variety of situations, it highlights that migration can both create risks for older people, but also serve as an answer to ageing-related social, economic, and health risks. The book explores tensions between national and global contexts in experiences of migration across the life course. As such this book offers a fascinating read to scholars, students, practitioners, and policy makers in the fields of aging, migration, life course, and population health. .
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-030-71442-0