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E-grāmata: Social Exclusion in Later Life: Interdisciplinary and Policy Perspectives

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Drawing on interdisciplinary, cross-national perspectives, this open access book contributes to the development of a coherent scientific discourse on social exclusion of older people. The book considers five domains of exclusion (services; economic; social relations; civic and socio-cultural; and community and spatial domains), with three chapters dedicated to analysing different dimensions of each exclusion domain. The book also examines the interrelationships between different forms of exclusion, and how outcomes and processes of different kinds of exclusion can be related to one another. In doing so, major cross-cutting themes, such as rights and identity, inclusive service infrastructures, and displacement of marginalised older adult groups, are considered. Finally, in a series of chapters written by international policy stakeholders and policy researchers, the book analyses key policies relevant to social exclusion and older people, including debates linked to sustainable development, EU policy and social rights, welfare and pensions systems, and planning and development. The book’s approach helps to illuminate the comprehensive multidimensionality of social exclusion, and provides insight into the relative nature of disadvantage in later life. With 77 contributors working across 28 nations, the book presents a forward-looking research agenda for social exclusion amongst older people, and will be an important resource for students, researchers and policy stakeholders working on ageing.

Section I Introduction
1 The Intersection of Ageing and Social Exclusion
3(22)
Kieran Walsh
Thomas Scharf
Sofie Van Regenmortel
Anna Wanka
Section II Economic Exclusion
2 Introduction: Framing Economic Exclusion
25(6)
Jim Ogg
Michal Myck
3 Socio-demographic Risk Factors Related to Material Deprivation Among Older Persons in Europe: A Comparative Analysis Based on SHARE Data
31(16)
Merle Sumil-Laanemaa
Luule Sakkeus
Allan Puur
Lauri Leppik
4 Unemployment at 50+: Economic and Psychosocial Consequences
47(14)
Elke Murdock
Marceline Filbig
Rita Borges Neves
5 Coping Mechanisms of Divorced and Widowed Older Women to Mitigate Economic Exclusion: A Qualitative Study in Turkey and Serbia
61(16)
Hande Barlin
Katarina Vojvodic
Murat Anil Mercan
Aleksandra Milicevic-Kalasic
Section III Exclusion from Social Relations
6 Introduction: Framing Exclusion from Social Relations
77(6)
Vanessa Burholt
Marja Aartsen
7 Exclusion from Social Relations Among Older People in Rural Britain and Belgium: A Cross-National Exploration Taking a Life-Course and Multilevel Perspective
83(16)
Sofie Van Regenmortel
Bethan Winter
Angelika Thelin
Vanessa Burholt
Liesbeth De Donder
8 Revisiting Loneliness: Individual and Country-Level Changes
99(20)
Deborah Morgan
Lena Dahlberg
Charles Waldegrave
Sarmite Mikulioniene
Grazina Rapoliene
Giovanni Lamura
Marja Aartsen
9 Conflicting Relations, Abuse and Discrimination Experienced by Older Adults
119(16)
Charles Waldegrave
Marja Aartsen
Ariela Lowenstein
Marjaana Seppanen
Mia Niemi
Maria Gabriella Melchiorre
Giovanni Lamura
Section IV Exclusion from Services
10 Introduction: Framing Exclusion from Services
135(6)
Veerle Draulans
Giovanni Lamura
11 Reversed Mobilities as a Means to Combat Older People's Exclusion from Services: Insights from Two Alpine Territories in France and Italy
141(16)
Florent Cholat
Luca Daconto
12 Exclusion from Home Care Services in Central and Eastern European Countries: A Focus on Hungary and the Russian Federation
157(12)
Zsuzsa Szeman
Elena Golubeva
Laszlo Patyan
13 Receiving Care Through Digital Health Technologies: Drivers and Implications of Old-Age Digital Health Exclusion
169(16)
Arianna Poli
Ioannis Kostakis
Francesco Barbabella
Section V Community and Spatial Exclusion
14 Introduction: Framing Community and Spatial Exclusion
185(8)
Isabelle Toumier
Lucie Vidovicova
15 Towards a Structural Embeddedness of Space in the Framework of the Social Exclusion of Older People
193(16)
Matthias Drilling
Hannah Grove
Byron Ioannou
Thibauld Moulaert
16 The Relationship Between Place and Life-Course Transitions in Old-Age Social Exclusion: A Cross-Country Analysis
209(14)
Anna Urbaniak
Anna Wanka
Kieran Walsh
Frank Oswald
17 Ageing and Caring in Rural Environments: Cross-National Insights from Central Europe
223(16)
Lucie Vidovicova
Monika Alisch
Susanne Kiimpers
Jolanta Perek-Biatas
Section VI Civic Exclusion
18 Introduction: Framing Civic Exclusion
239(6)
Sandra Torres
19 Reconceptualising Exclusion from Civic Engagement in Later Life: Towards a New Research Agenda
245(14)
Rodrigo Serrat
Thomas Scharf
Feliciano Villar
20 Cultural Exclusion in Old-Age: A Social Exclusion Perspective on Cultural Practice in Later Life
259(16)
Vera Gallistl
21 Sidestepping Rights: An Analysis of the Intersection of Human Rights Obligations and Their Practical Implications for Older Migrants
275(14)
Ada Lui Gallassi
Lars Harrysson
Section VII Interrelationships Between Different Domains of Exclusion
22 Introduction: Framing Exclusion Interrelationships
289(8)
Lena Dahlberg
23 Older People in Long-Term Care Institutions: A Case of Multidimensional Social Exclusion
297(14)
Feliciano Villar
Rodrigo Serrat
Annette Bilfeldt
Joe Larragy
24 Two Dimensions of Social Exclusion: Economic Deprivation and Dynamics of Loneliness During Later Life in Europe
311(16)
Michal Myck
Charles Waldegrave
Lena Dahlberg
25 Beyond Accessibility: Transport Systems as a Societal Structure Supporting Inclusion in Late-Life
327(12)
Anu Siren
26 Homelessness Trends in Ageing Literature in the Context of Domains of Social Exclusion
339(14)
Nilufer Korkmaz-Yaylagul
Ahmet Melik Bas
Section VIII Policy and Social Exclusion in Later Life
27 Introduction: Policy to Reduce Late-Life Social Exclusion -- From Aspirations to Action
353(6)
Norah Keating
Maria Cheshire-Allen
28 Older-Age Exclusion and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
359(14)
Patricia Conboy
29 The Role of Pension Policies in Preventing Old-Age Exclusion
373(12)
Jim Ogg
30 Social Policy for Older People in the Post-Soviet Space: How Do Pension Systems and Social Services Influence Social Exclusion?
385(12)
Irina Grigoryeva
Oksana Parfenova
Alexandra Dmitrieva
31 How Can Urban Design and Architecture Support Spatial Inclusion for Nursing Home Residents?
397(12)
John Andersen
Annette Bilfeldt
Marianne Mahler
Lone Sigbrand
32 Old-Age Digital Exclusion as a Policy Challenge in Estonia and Finland
409(12)
Anu Leppiman
Iivi Riivits-Arkonsuo
Anneli Pohjola
33 Social Exclusion in Older-Age and the European Pillar of Social Rights
421(14)
Maciej Kucharczyk
Section IX Conclusion
34 Advancing Research and Policy on Social Exclusion of Older People: Towards a Coherent and Critical Discourse
435
Thomas Scharf
Kieran Walsh
Sofie Van Regenmortel
Anna Wanka
Kieran Walsh is Professor of Ageing & Public Policy and Director of the Irish Centre for Social Gerontology, National University of Ireland Galway. Prior to taking up this role in 2018, he served as Project Director of Project Lifecourse within the Institute for Lifecourse and Society, a programme of work dedicated to capturing the lived experiences of children and youth, older people and people with disabilities in urban neighbourhoods. Kieran's research interests include: social exclusion in later life; the mediating role of public and social policy; place and life-course transitions; and informal and formal infrastructures of care. Kieran is Chair of the European COST Action CA15122 on Reducing Old-Age Social Exclusion, which comprises over 180 members from 41 different countries.





Thomas Scharf is Professor of Social Gerontology in the Population Health Sciences Institute and Co-Director of the Centre for Ageing & Inequalities at Newcastle University. He joined Newcastle in 2016, having previously been Director of the Irish Centre for Social Gerontology, NUI Galway. Tom is a Fellow of the UK Academy of Social Sciences and holds visiting professorships at NUI Galway and Keele University. He is President of the British Society of Gerontology (until 2022). Tom is Vice Chair of the European COST Action CA15122 on Reducing Old-Age Social Exclusion. Toms research addresses issues relating to social inclusion and exclusion in later life, often with a focus on the spaces and places in which inclusion and exclusion arise and on the policy responses to forms of exclusion.





Sofie Van Regenmortel received her masters degree in Adult Educational Sciences (Agogische Wetenschappen) from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) in 2013. In October 2013 she started working at the Department of Adult Educational Sciences at the VUB, became a member of the Belgian Ageing Studies (BAS) research group and started her PhD research on social exclusion in later life, which she successfully completed in September 2017. Together with her supervisor, prof. dr. Liesbeth De Donder, she was part of the European project WeDO2! For the well being and dignity of older people (2013-2015). In 2016 she joined the ROSEnet COST action on Reducing Old-Age Social Exclusion: Collaborations in Research and Policy. Currently she is working for Statbel (Statistics Belgium) and remains involved in the BAS research as a voluntary research member.





Anna Wanka studied Sociology and Law at the University of Vienna, Austria. From 2009 to 2016 she worked as a researcher at the Research Group Family / Generations / Life Course / Health and Ageing at the Department of Sociology in Vienna, where she was involved in various third-party funded projects, completed several international research fellowships and international teaching appointments. She completed her PhD in the field of environmental gerontology in December 2016. Since 2017 she is a postdoc researcher at the research training group Doing Transitions at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Her main research areas lie in the field of environmental and social exclusion in later life, life course transitions, technology and ageing, as well as lifelong learning.