Transcript Document

Inclusive communities: opportunities and
challenges in older age
Thomas Scharf
Director, Irish Centre for Social Gerontology, NUI Galway
Respond! Housing Association National Conference
Dublin, 23 October 2013
Irish Centre for Social Gerontology
• Research on ageing and the life course
• Informing policy and practice
• Education and training
Ageing and place: a major focus
• Places where people age
– Different types of community
– Different types of housing
– Institutional and noninstitutional settings
– Different types of people
• What makes places good places
to age in?
Inclusive communities start at ‘home’
• “Home is territory – a place of possession and ownership that may
be fiercely defended. Home is a place of safety and security. Often,
home is the spatial fulcrum of our life, a place of centering that may
become the core of our being and a location from which we venture
forth into a potentially hostile world outside and beyond and to which
we return for shelter. Home is a place of freedom, a location where
we can let go and be ourselves” (Rowles, 2003: 115)
Inclusive communities reach beyond ‘home’
• ‘Home’ seems to matter
more as people age
• But feeling at ‘home’ can
be challenged in hostile
communities
Age-friendly communities
•
WHO Global Age-friendly Cities initiative
Age-friendly communities: a new definition
•
“Underpinned by a commitment to respect and social inclusion, an
age-friendly community is engaged in a strategic and ongoing
process to facilitate active ageing by optimising its physical and
social environments and its supporting infrastructure” (Liddle et al.,
2013: 6)
•
Age-friendly communities as ‘inclusive’ communities:
•
As locations where there is a good ‘fit’ between people and
place
Applying the new definition
New domains of age-friendliness
WHO dimensions of age-friendliness
Strategic improvement process
Physical environment
Outdoor spaces and buildings
Housing
Social environment
Social participation
Civic participation and employment
Supportive infrastructure
Transportation
Community, support and (health) services
Respect and social inclusion
Respect and inclusion
Communication and information
Age-friendly communities: opportunities
• Changing the language of ageing: from ‘burden’ to ‘opportunity’
and ‘contribution’
• Making ageing everybody’s business: public sector, private sector,
community and voluntary sector, citizens, communities etc.
• Ensuring that communities become more habitable for people as
they age
• Preventing ‘home’-lessness in later life: ensuring that communities
become more habitable for people as they age
Age-friendly communities: challenges
• Ensuring full involvement of older people
• Securing commitment to a strategic and ongoing improvement
process
• Extending age-friendliness to different types of place (housing
schemes; care settings; prisons; commercial spaces etc.)
• Thinking about the age-friendly characteristics that matter to
different groups of older people
• Providing evidence to assess age-friendliness
Contact details
[email protected]
www.icsg.ie