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Age Discrimination in Employment

Molecular Mechanisms of Skin Aging and Age-Related Diseases

The Digital Age in Agriculture

Age Friendly Ending Ageism in America

Age Friendly Ending Ageism in America

Age Friendly: Ending Ageism in America is a rallying call to make the United States a more equitable and just nation in terms of age. Age friendliness means being inclusive towards older people as workers consumers and citizens something that can’t be said to exist today. The United States and especially Big Business are notoriously age-unfriendly places a result of our obsession with youth. Virtually all aspects of everyday life in America will be impacted by the doubling or tripling of the number of older people over the next two decades more reason to adopt age friendliness as a cause. Age Friendly shows how large companies are in an ideal position to address the aging of America and in the process benefit from making their organizations more age friendly. Because of its economic power and commitment to diversity in the workplace Big Business—specifically the Fortune 1000—has the opportunity and responsibility to take a leadership role in changing the narrative of aging in America. The book shows that age friendliness offers the possibility of bridging gaps not just between younger and older people but those based on income class race gender politics and geography. More than anything else Age Friendly presents a bold and counterintuitive idea—aging is a positive thing for businesses individuals and society as a whole—and we should embrace it rather than fear it. While ageism is a pervasive force in America that like racism and gender discrimination runs contrary to our democratic ideals there is some good news. An age friendly movement is spreading in America and around the world as a growing number of cities and towns strive to better meet the needs of their older residents. Aa well a concerted effort is being made to convince Big Business that an intergenerational workforce is in the best interests of not just older employees but the companies themselves. Age brings experience perspective and wisdom—just the right skill set for both short- and long-term decision-making. The aging of America also presents major implications for businesses in terms of marketing to older consumers. Baby boomers are still the key to the economy despite marketers’ focus on youth much in part to their collective wealth and propensity to consume. Age friendly marketing thus makes much sense due to the longevity economy i. e. the billions of dollars that older consumers spend each year and the goldmine that looms in the future as they become an even bigger percentage of the population. Finally Age Friendly discusses how more corporations are pursuing social responsibility in addition to maximizing profits—an ideal opportunity for corporations to demonstrate good citizenship by supporting age friendliness on a local state or national level. | Age Friendly Ending Ageism in America

GBP 28.99
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Local Societies in Bronze Age Northern Europe

The Stuart Age England 1603–1714

Vikings Across Boundaries Viking-Age Transformations – Volume II

Bronze Age Worlds A Social Prehistory of Britain and Ireland

Intelligence Analysis in the Digital Age

Intergenerational Mobilities Relationality age and lifecourse

Leadership Resilience in a Digital Age

The Iron Age in Northern Britain Britons and Romans Natives and Settlers

Stone Age Economics

Political Inequality in an Age of Democracy Cross-national Perspectives

Scriptwriting for Web Series Writing for the Digital Age

Free Expression in the Age of the Internet Social and Legal Boundaries

Orwell’s “Politics and the English Language” in the Age of Pseudocracy

Developing Age-Friendly Communities in the UK Re-creating Places and Spaces

Developing Age-Friendly Communities in the UK Re-creating Places and Spaces

The ageing population is a global societal issue. Policymakers planners and the public third and private sectors must rethink how the built environment and services are delivered to meet the needs of a changing demographic. This is the first book to systematically review the evolution development and progress of age-friendly thinking in the UK with a primary focus on the real-world experiences of the people leading place-based initiatives. The book presents the findings of the first in-depth national study of age-friendly programme leaders in the UK completed in 2021 and provides insights into the development of age-friendly communities the formative influences from a social policy perspective the management challenges and the progress towards achieving age-friendly goals. Using primary interview data and narrative analysis the experiences of working with age-friendly programmes in different organisational forms are explored. The book promotes a greater understanding of what it means to become an age-friendly community in practice how the programmes have different development pathways and what influences different outcomes. Embellished with detailed narratives from practitioners informative tables and diagrams and figures throughout the book carefully gathers the voices of a diverse range of decision-makers and leaders associated with the age-friendly movement and provides unique insights on the drivers of change in specific localities. This is a must-read for anyone involved in ageing research or ageing policy and practice as it provides an insightful look into the real world of embedding this community development model in different localities to make a difference to the lives of older people. Topical themes include how these agendas connect with other issues such as dementia-friendly programmes and the work of the third sector as well as the growing challenge of what it means to be ‘friendly’ as a community and place and whether ‘friendly’ is becoming an over-used term in relation to place identity. The book has national and global interest for all communities engaged in age-friendly activity offering exemplars of best practice achievements in transforming local communities and views on the meaning of ageing as well as the age-friendly lens as an approach that champions the world through the eyes of older people. It offers a thought-provoking read for anyone with an interest in this expanding area of ageing irrespective of disciplinary focus. | Developing Age-Friendly Communities in the UK Re-creating Places and Spaces

GBP 44.99
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Old Age Homes

Old Age Homes

Originally published in 1981 in Old Age Homes Roger Clough presents a vivid description of the lives and work of residents and staff in an old people’s home. His powerful analysis of the realities of residential work would make a major contribution to improved practice to social work training and to social policy formation. Many people including some social work professionals still felt that the very existence of residential homes illustrated a failure of society and that living with their own family or on their own was invariably a more satisfactory experience for old people. Roger Clough questions this assumption. He argues that homes are needed and if they are to be good places in which to live and die there must be a clearer understanding of the interactions that take place within them. The descriptive parts of the study based on detailed observation and lengthy interviews strongly reflect the author’s genuine compassion and warmth for old people. His most illuminating perceptions are presented from the perspective of the old people themselves many of whom were conscious of the double-bind in which residents and staff are caught: there is a prevailing belief that it is best to keep active in old age yet many of the elderly had little they though worth doing while the staff saw their role as doing whatever they could for the residents. Roger Clough uses his material to test two central hypotheses: first that there is a linkage between the attitudes to aging held by staff and the degree of control over their own lives exercised by residents; and secondly that this degree of control is strongly correlated with resident satisfaction. Through an acute analysis of these key variables he demonstrates the circumstances in which living in a home can be for certain old people at certain times the way of life they themselves would choose. His conclusions are of the greatest importance for social work practice and for the changing of staff attitudes in training. Old Age Homes would challenge anybody who knows or works with a resident in an old people’s home. But it would be of outstanding value for the managers practitioners trainers and students to whom it was primarily addressed at the time.

GBP 27.99
1

Moral Challenges in a Pandemic Age

Moral Challenges in a Pandemic Age

The COVID-19 pandemic whose consequences will be felt in the long term can be interpreted as a signal that we have been living in a pandemic age. A pandemic is humanity's common ground so the moral problems inherent in it are of interest to everyone from now on. It brought a set of moral challenges that cannot be ignored. This book – which emerged amid the novel coronavirus crisis – is designed to fill the gap in the current literature on the topic offering an original approach to its moral implications. It can be taken as a guide in the face of these pandemic-age challenges for human relations. The pandemic is a multifaceted phenomenon and its debate involves a wide variety of practical philosophical concerns. All the chapters of this book divided into four sections aim to clarify its central aspects while each chapter provides an original approach to the debate’s leading issues and relies on each most significant collaborator’s expertise. Also they reflect their unique pandemic experiences under the scrutiny of philosophical unrest. Since the pandemic is an ongoing event Moral Challenges in a Pandemic Age will be of interest to professors students and researchers engaged in understanding the ethical dimension of the age we are experiencing. The problems addressed in this collection transcend the boundaries of the philosophical field offering an innovative approach to individuals keen on discussing the pandemic from a moral point of view. Such a discussion encompasses the philosophical inquiry but is not restricted to it. Those interested in related areas such as psychology sociology biology public health education anthropology and cultural studies – to name a few – will find connections with parallel themes in this book. In addition the collection brings a theoretically supported approach to several related debates in a language accessible to anyone who wants to know more about the topic.

GBP 130.00
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American Sports From the Age of Folk Games to the Age of the Internet

The Indigo Children New Age Experimentation with Self and Science