Moving beyond 'ageing in place': Older people's dislikes about their home and neighbourhood environments as a motive for wishing to move

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Abstract

Ageing in place has been promoted by policy makers as the optimal residential solution for later life, premised on older people's reluctance to contemplate relocation, their declining residential mobility and high levels of residential satisfaction. This paper takes a critical perspective to the notion of ageing in place by examining older people's dislikes about, rather than levels of satisfaction with their home and neighbourhood environments, and establishing whether such dislikes influence a desire to move. Analysis of the 2004 Living in Wales Survey shows that despite high levels of residential satisfaction, a significant proportion of older people do wish to move. Logistic regression results indicate this desire is strongly associated with dislikes about their immediate home environment, more than neighbourhood factors. Contemplating a move in later life may be shaped more by a desire to 'attach' to people, than to remain in situ to preserve an attachment to place.

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APA

Hillcoat-Nallétamby, S., & Ogg, J. (2014, June 20). Moving beyond “ageing in place”: Older people’s dislikes about their home and neighbourhood environments as a motive for wishing to move. Ageing and Society. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X13000482

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