Document sans nom

Date 09/10/2010
Agetimes in french
Agetimes in spanish
AgetimesEurope.com
Your user Name  
 

 

 
Document sans nom
   
 
  Become a reporter
  Submit your news
   
  Advertise on Agetimes
  Be sponsor
  Take us as sponsor
  About us
 
 
TOPICS
 
All articles
All interviews
Associations
Automotive - Transport
Cosmetics - Beauty
Demography
Domotic - Real estate
Human Ressources
Insurance - Bank
IT - Electronics
Leisure - Tourism
Pharma - Health
Retail industry
Seniorhousing
Services - Housecare
Gerontology
Medias
Marketing - Commu.
Retirement
Wellness - Sport
Others
 
NEWS BY COUNTRY
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
NEWS BY CHANNEL
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
ABOUT US
  Agetimes Institute
  Agetimes
  Contacts us
 


Home > All articles 

Your advertisement here

 

Critically Understanding Asian Perspectives on Ageing

Document sans titre

Asian countries are experiencing demographic transition from a young to an increasingly older population. The ageing of populations is unfolding against a context often characterised by persistent poverty, gender vulnerability, economic strain, constricted public resources, and limited civil institutions to support the elderly.

Two key interlinked dimensions are important: first, how social and economic changes have affected or will affect the well-being and support situation of present or future older people, and how older people’s needs and position in society relate to development and the consequences for policy. The paper identifies the gaps that exist in our understanding of ageing in Asian developing countries and discusses the key issues, tensions and perspectives that characterise current debates at local level and their implications for development in many Asian developing and some transitional countries. The paper urges recognition of ageing and development as part of poverty reduction strategies.

This paper adopts a critical perspective in understanding ageing and the preparedness of Asian developing countries to address future challenges of ageing populations.1 Examining the emerging questions and debates in this field requires an insight into the demographic transition and future challenges these countries are facing. These challenges will have important policy implications. Asian developing countries have less time to set in place the institutions needed to cope with population ageing, and are disadvantaged by fiscal constraints, poor governance and weak public agencies.

Specific issues will be drawn out, with several examples to highlight some of the concerns faced by these countries. The future path of population ageing in Asia over the coming decades is well predicted and demographically significant. In explaining the need for a critical understanding of the Asian ageing phenomenon, we argue that it is imperative to view the well-being of older people as a social group within their historical cohorts and their respective life courses. The underlying question to be answered is to what extent ageing Asian countries are poised to address the challenges of increasingly ageing societies and how growing proportions of changing age structures of populations will affect societies’ economic and social structures.

> Dowload the paper

 

 

By KS Date 20-06-2009

Your advertisement here

 

 

 

 


Document sans nom
  FREE NEWSLETTER
 
  AGENDA

Retirement Communities World Asia 2010 : 2010-09-20 Grand Hyatt Singapore

Are you struggling to find research on Boomers? : 2010-09-28 Narm

Nara retirement conference : 2010-10-20 COLUMBIA

Gerontology & Geriatrics : Gerontology & Geriatrics 2011 : 2010-10-23 Australia

AAHSA Annual Meeting and Exposition – 2010 : 2010-10-31 Los Angeles

Older Persons: The Future of Care – 2010 : 2010-11-04 Rotterdam, The Netherlands

2010 AARP International Innovative Employer Award : 2010-11-24 Brussels, Belgium

Silvers Summit 2011 : Silvers Summit 2011 : 2011-01-06 US

Aging in America : Aging in America 2011 : 2011-04-26 US

IFA 11th Global Conference in Prague : 2012-05-28 Prague

All conferences
Add your event

Agetimes | Contacts | Advertisement | Press
© Agetimes - Email : info(ATE)agetimes(one point)com