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E-grāmata: New Challenges to Ageing in the Rural North: A Critical Interdisciplinary Perspective

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This book provides an underexplored view of ageing, one that conceives older people as valuable resources in their communities, as active citizens with both voice, and an agency that includes the capacity for resistance. It acknowledges that becoming old with dignity means also paying attention to caring, good health services and the possibility of good death. The book defines age and ageing as multiple, culturally and historically constructed phenomena that are only loosely connected to the years of one’s life. In focusing on the peripheral North located in the Nordic, Canadian and Russian north, it highlights important questions and viewpoints that can be found and adapted to other rural areas. The book answers the following questions: What is the relevance of legislation and international legal agreements in ensuring the rights of elderly people under political and economic changes? What challenges do geographic isolation, changing age structure, and cultural and ecological transformations pose to possibilities for meeting older people’s needs for engagement in society as well as for their care?  As such this book will be of interest to all those working in population aging. 

Part I. Changing Politics and Welfare Policies in the North.
Chapter
1.
CEDAW and the Capability Approach as a Way to Promote Elderly Women in the
North(Eva-Maria Svensson).
Chapter
2. Gender Equality and Ageing in Arctic
Sweden(Lena Wennberg).
Chapter
3. Elder Care Policy and Service System in
Phase of Transition in Finland(Heli Valokivi).
Chapter
4. New Opportunities
Telling the Same Frustrating Story Care Sector Marketization and Innovations
in Finland(Petra Merenheimo).- Part II. Challenges in Meeting Older Peoples
Needs in the Northern Rural Context.
Chapter
5. Approaches to Prevent Social
Exclusion of Older Adults in Arctic Russian Remote Area(Anastasia Emelyanova
& Elena Golubeva).
Chapter
6. Social Cultural Construction of Dying Self in
the Context of Care(Marjo Outila, Marjaana Seppänen, Heli Valokivi, Eeva
Rossi).
Chapter
7. Exploring Challenges to Elderly in a Rural Settings: A
Case Study from Finnish Lapland(Shahnaj Begum).
Chapter
8. Hit by the Stroke
AnAuto-Ehnographic Analysis of Caring Old Parents from Long Distance(Marit
Aure).
Chapter
9. Individually but Together: Old Couple Preparing for Old
Age(Olga Asrun Stefansdottir & Eydis Kristin Sveinbjarnardottir).
Chapter
10. Social Inclusion and Agency of Older Women in Rural Tornedalen, North
Sweden(Tarja Tapio).- Part III. Age, voice and resistance.
Chapter
11. Are
We Really Listening? Ageism, Voice, and Older Peoples Diversity in Nordic
Societies Undergoing Welfare Change(Joan R. Harbison).
Chapter
12. From
active ageing to Local Perspectives on Quality of Life(Mai Camilla
Munkejord, &Walter Schönfelder).
Chapter
13. Elderly people as political
actors in Lapland(Päivi Naskali).
Chapter
14. "We do not eat luxury food" A
story about health and food in the everyday life of an elder Sami reindeer
herder in Norway(Trine Kvitberg).- Conclusion.
Päivi Naskali is a Professor of Gender Studies at the University of Lapland. She is a head of the Finnish University Network of Gender Studies, has worked actively in the National Doctoral School in Gender Studies and edited the Journal of Womens Studies. Her research interests include gender and ageing in the times of neoliberalism, educational gender politics and feminist pedagogy and philosophy. She has lately been leading a research project The Arctic Change and Elderly Exclusion: A Gender-based Perspective.





 Joan R. Harbison is an Adjunct Professor at Dalhousie University School of Social Work. Her work includes interdisciplinary approaches to research in the fields of ageing, health, and social service delivery. She has published in numerous national and international texts and journals and contributed to many scholarly international, interdisciplinary, development and research projects. Recently she authored the text Contesting Elder Abuse and Neglect: Ageism, Risk, and the Rhetoric of Rights in the Mistreatment of Older People, University of British Columbia Press, Fall, 2016, in collaboration with her interdisciplinary research team from law, sociology and social work.





 Shahnaj Begum is a Post-doctoral researcher at the Unit for Gender Studies in the Faculty of Education of the University of Lapland. Her research focuses on Northern elderly well-being and gender issues in the context of Arctic change. She is a member of the University of the Arctic Thematic Network of Health and Well being in the Arctic.