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Contemporary Sociology | 1994

Achieving a productive aging society

Marjorie E. Starrels; Scott A. Bass; Francis G. Caro; Yung-Ping Chen

Preface by Scott A. Bass Achieving a Productive Aging Society by Francis G. Caro, Scott A. Bass, and Yung-Ping Chen Age, Productivity, and Transcendence by Harry R. Moody Labor Market Obstacles to Productive Aging by Joseph F. Quinn and Richard V. Burkhauser Ageism in the Labor Market versus Productive Aging by Alan Walker and Philip Taylor New Technologies and the Aging Work Force by David C. Mowery and Mark S. Kamlet Is Unretirement Unprecedented? by W. Andrew Achenbaum and Malcolm H. Morrison Formal Volunteer Work Among Older Americans by A. Regula Herzog and James N. Morgan Caregiving and Productive Aging by Pamela Doty and Baila Miller The Political Economy of Productive Aging: Long-term Care by Laura Katz Olson Religious Institutions and Productive Aging: Lost Traditions/Horizons Reclaimed by W. Andrew Achenbaum The Lessons of Television: Learning Productive Aging as a Social Role by George Gerbner A Strategy for Productive Aging: Education in Later Life by Harry R. Moody Womens Lives, Womens Work: Productivity, Gender, and Aging by Martha Holstein Cultural and Ethnic Contexts of Aging Productively Over the Life-Course: An Economic Network Framework by James S. Jackson, Toni C. Antonucci, and Rose C. Gibson Continuing Limits on Productive Aging: The Lesser Rewards for Working Women by Karen C. Holden Conclusion: Defining the Place of the Elderly for the 21st Century by Robert Morris Index


Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology | 1992

International perspectives on aging policy: A review essay of three recent volumes

Scott A. Bass

SummaryOnly in the very broadest and most abstract sense do these three volumes reflect on similar issues in aging in social policy — that is, the changing context of the responsibilities of the family and state toward the aged. Within two of these books the prevailing wisdom is that the state in most cases will be taking on fewer responsibilities with families assuming more. In certain societies and cultures, little in the way of a role has been associated with the state historically. Care for the elderly has been the responsibility of the family and/or community, and despite changes in the economy and society, human exchanges have remained unaltered. In other societies, change has been more rapid, leaving elders without adequate support or nurturance. And, in largely industrial and Western societies, the state may be relinquishing its roles, leaving families stretching to cover the gaps. Only Schulz, Borowski, and Crown provide carefully reasoned economic arguments regarding the capacity of the state to provide continued financial security to the aged in the future. But future economic security for the elderly does not respond to the broader issues of the responsibility for caring and social support that the other authors have alluded may be eroding from those states that currently provide such services. Admittedly, the direction in all the nations discussed and in each of the volumes is to a smaller role for government and an increased role for families.Each of the three books reviewed is truly international in authorship and perspective. Sensitive to the concern that Bleddyn Davies from the University of Kent at Canterbury articulates as the dominance of an American perspective in aging and social policy (1989), the authors and editors have been global and multinational in their work. In particular,An Aging World has attracted authors from nations throughout the world with few using examples or comparisons to the United States.It has been difficult to review three works that are so different and span so much content. The depth of material, the detail, and the many issues raised inAn Aging World in itself are difficult to summarize. Nevertheless, it is the specifics and the details that make these works so interesting to read.


Journal of Applied Gerontology | 1988

Book Reviews : G. Lesnoff-Caravaglia (Ed.), Realistic Expectations for Long Life. New York: Human Sciences Press, Inc., 1987. 279 pp.

Scott A. Bass

Perhaps no other gerontological issue strikes the fascination of the public more than that of the extension of life. Newspaper columnists and media journalists speculate on it, entrepreneurs lay claim to products or practices that propose to extend life, and for good reason, most of us would like to live as long and as well as we can. But what is the state of scientific knowledge about life expectation? What do we know to be possible and probable? What are the outer boundaries of longevity? How do we prevent premature death and what are the


Gerontologist | 2000

29.95 cloth

Scott A. Bass; Kenneth F. Ferraro


Contemporary Sociology | 1990

Gerontology Education in Transition: Considering Disciplinary and Paradigmatic Evolution.

Eileen M. Crimmins; Robert A. Morris; Scott A. Bass


Gerontologist | 2006

Retirement reconsidered : economic and social roles for older people

Scott A. Bass


Gerontologist | 1986

GERONTOLOGICAL THEORY: THE SEARCH FOR THE HOLY GRAIL

Robert A. Morris; Scott A. Bass


Journal of Aging & Social Policy | 1990

The Elderly As Surplus People: Is There a Role for Higher Education?

Scott A. Bass; Fernando Torres-Gil; Elizabeth A. Kutza


Gerontologist | 2007

On the Relationship Between the Diversity of the Aging Population and Public Policy

Scott A. Bass


Journal of Aging & Social Policy | 1996

THE EMERGENCE OF THE GOLDEN AGE OF SOCIAL GERONTOLOGY

Scott A. Bass

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Robert A. Morris

University of Massachusetts Boston

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Eileen M. Crimmins

University of Southern California

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Francis G. Caro

University of Massachusetts Boston

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