The Structured Dependency of the Elderly: A Creation of Social Policy in the Twentieth Century

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Abstract

If we are to develop better methods of integrating elderly people into society then above all we need a better sociology of the ageing and the aged. In this paper I wish to put forward the thesis that the dependency of the elderly in the twentieth century is being manufactured socially and that its severity is unnecessary.1The process can therefore be revised or at least modified. Certain major influences, which will be discussed below, are steadily deepening, or widening that dependency. There is the imposition, and acceptance, of earlier retirement; the legitimation of low income; the denial of rights to self-determination in institutions; and the construction of community services for recipients assumed to be predominantly passive. © 1981, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.

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APA

Townsend, P. (1981). The Structured Dependency of the Elderly: A Creation of Social Policy in the Twentieth Century. Ageing and Society, 1(1), 5–28. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X81000020

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