ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Johns Hopkins University Press
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9780801864537
RRP: £40.00
PAGES: 304
PUBLICATION DATE:
October 19, 2000
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Social Integration in the Second Half of Life
Karl A. Pillemer
Phyllis Moen
Elaine Wethington
et al
Social scientists use the term social integration to refer to individuals’ connections with others in their environments. The concept and its consequences have been the subject of considerable study. Many researchers have asserted that meaningful and enduring ties to other persons serve as a buffer against stress, and thereby promote physical and mental health. The results are especially pronounced for older persons. Social Integration in the Second Half of Life presents integrative reviews of theory and research on this topic. The editors and contributors, all currently or previously affiliated with the Cornell Gerontology Research Institute, also present new empirical findings of research done at their center. The first section of the book discusses basic theory and principles of social integration in later life and its implications for health. The second, largest section examines specific issues: retirement, driving, family support, housing, neighbors. The third section addresses interventions to promote social integration: transportation, volunteering, and peer support for dementia caregivers.Throughout, the authors focus on the diverging influences of social integration and its converse, social isolation, in later life. “Pillemer and colleagues, in their excellent review of social integration at the threshold of the 21st century, document the problems of mid-lifers and elders as they seek social integration, that is, a life with people.”–The Gerontologist “Karl Pillemer, Phyllis Moen, Elaine Wethington, and Nina Glasgow succeed admirably in giving social integration a contemporary focus using a life-course perspective that emphasizes institutional context, linked lives, and processes of development and change. They should be congratulated on this insightful volume integrating theory and research on social integration and the larger issue of successful aging. Researchers and practitioners alike will find this clearly written and well-organized book a very useful reference. Moreover, it could be used in graduate courses in gerontology because of its content and focus or in research methods for its excellent examples of sociological research.”–Contemporary Sociology “This volume will stand for years to come as a widely cited summary document that pulls together both existing literature and original findings. The scholarship is exemplary and the insights are laudable. Because of the book’s intrinsic merit, it will approach the status of ‘handbook’ on social integration and therefore will be tantamount to required reading in graduate-level social gerontology classes.”–Jon Hendricks, Oregon State University
Reviews of Social Integration in the Second Half of Life
"Karl Pillemer, Phyllis Moen, Elaine Wethington, and Nina Glasgow succeed admirably in giving social integration a contemporary focus using a life-course perspective that emphasizes institutional context, linked lives, and processes of development and change. They should be congratulated on this insightful volume integrating theory and research on social integration and the larger issue of successful aging. Researchers and practitioners alike will find this clearly written and well-organized book a very useful reference. Moreover, it could be used in graduate courses in gerontology because of its content and focus or in research methods for its excellent examples of sociological research." — Jennifer Crew Solomon, Contemporary Sociology
Karl A. Pillemer
Karl Pillemer is a professor in the Department of Human Development at Cornell University. Phyllis Moen is the Ferris Family Professor of Life Course Studies in the Department of Human Development, and director of the Bronfenbrenner Life Course Center, Cornell University. Elaine Wethington is an associate professor in the Departments of Human Development and Sociology at Cornell University. Nina Glasgow is a senior research associate in the Department of Rural Sociology at Cornell University.