Matilda White Riley
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Matilda White Riley.
Journal of Family Issues | 1983
Matilda White Riley
Because of unprecedented increases in longevity, the kinship structure has been transformed. Linkages among family members have been prolonged, and the surviving generations in a family have increased in number and complexity. Todays kinship structure (which has no parallel in history) can be viewed in a new way: as a latent web of continually shifting linkages that provide the potential for activating and intensifying close family relationships. These relationships are no longer prescribed as strict obligations, but must be earned—created and recreated by family members over their lives. Such changes in the structure and dynamics of family relationships raise many questions and issues for students of the family including the development of special research approaches needed to understand the complexity of these relationships and the nature of older peoples family relationships in the future.
Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science | 1989
Matilda White Riley; John W. Riley
This article addresses the central dilemma of the mismatch between the strengths and capacities of the increasing numbers of older people in the United States, on the one hand, and the inadequate social-role opportunities to utilize, reward, and sustain these strengths, on the other. In order to enhance the quality of aging, interventions are needed, both in the ways individuals grow older and in the environing matrix of families, work organizations, political institutions, health care systems, and all the other social structures in which peoples lives are embedded. Examples of interventions in both lives and role structures demonstrate the potential for improvement. Looking toward the future, these interventions are seen to affect people of all ages and call for ultimate gradual redesign of the life course from birth to death. An analytical framework of the relationship between aging and broad changes in society is presented as a guide in designing small-scale interventions that can accumulate to benefit—rather than to impair—the well-being of older people now and in the future.
Ageing & Society | 1999
Matilda White Riley; John W. Riley
The hallmark of sociology is its emphases on first, people, secondly, structures and, thirdly, their interrelationships. Similarly, we see sociological research on age as concerned with (1) people over their life course; (2) age-related structures and institutions; and (3) the dynamic interplay between people and structures as each influences the other. Guided by our ‘aging and society paradigm’, we review the research legacy as it has focused more on (1) than on (2), and is only now concerned with understanding the interplay between them (3). Hence our challenge to future researchers is to devise strategies for understanding and analysing this interplay and its possible contributions to the ever-accumulating research legacy.
Gerontologist | 1994
Matilda White Riley; John W. Riley
Gerontologist | 1994
Matilda White Riley
Archive | 1954
H. J. Eysenck; Matilda White Riley; John W. Riley; Jackson Toby
Center for Policy Research Policy Briefs | 1998
Matilda White Riley
Archive | 1996
Matilda White Riley; John W. Riley
Sociometry | 1958
Matilda White Riley; Richard Cohn
Archive | 1972
Matilda White Riley; Marilyn Johnson; Anne Foner