Age Inequalities Flashcards
Prout and James? (Interactionist)
Argue that age categories are socially constructed and vary in different societies.
Eg rites of passage
Carrigan and Szmigin? (Interactionists)
The elderly are labelled negatively eg being smelly and incontinent. Perhaps these step types become reality.
Cohen (Interactionist)
Work on moral panics. Relevant explanation for inequalities that young people face.
Hockey and James (Interactionist)
Discuss the term infantalised which is used to describe the way that old people are treated like young children. Eg in care homes being bathed and not having control over their own money.
Weber (Weberian)
Looks at class, status and party. The young and the sleepy lose status because of their age. Young people lack the power to make changes in their society (they lack party). Social class is effected by market position which is linked to qualifications. Young people may lack market position necessary for a higher class position.
Parkin? (Weber)
Negatively privileged status groups. Can be applied to age as the young and old can also be kept out of privileged status groups by social segregation. The elderly are often socially segregated in the media through invisibility, in employment, retirement and care homes.
Barron and Norris (Weber)
Dual labour market.
Amber and Ginn. (Feminists)
When looking at women and inequality, factors such as age will affect their power. Older women face inequalities that older men do not.
Sontag? (Feminism)
Old women are more likely to be in high profile media roles. Women’s biological ageing is less desirable than men.
Itzin? (Feminism)
Women face a double standard. Men’s status is directly related to employment, whereas women’s is linked to their reproductive cycle. Women’s status devalues after childbearing age. So, older women face lower status. Therefore,older women feel pressure to fight the signs of ageing (known as cosmeticisation). Ageing men don’t necessarily find the same pressures.
Gannon? (Feminism)
Looks at myths to do with ageing and argues that the differences in the ageing process are more to do with lifestyles and expectations placed on women rather than biology.
Andocentric = men as the norm and females hormones as a problem.
Scientific discourses portray differences in the differences in the lifestyles of males and females.
Dualistic notions = a changing body may be seen as diseased.
Oakley? (Feminism)
Comparison of women and children conveys a picture of mutual dependence and interdependence and mutual oppression.
- women and children are interlinked and interdependent. The inequality they face and suffer are similar.
Eg adults speak for children like men speak for women.
What is the dependency ratio?
Measures the number of dependants aged zero to fourteen and aged over sixty five, compared with the total population aged fifteen to sixty four.
Insight into the people of non working age, compared with the number of people of working age.
Parsons? (Functionalism)
Society can be understood through the organic analogy. Certain age groups have norms and values that threaten social stability. Eg rebellious youth or dependant elderly.
Society is in agreement over social roles. Old people disengage fro society to enable to make space for young people.
Disengagement theory similar to that discussed by cumming and Henry.
Cumming and Henry? (Functionalism)
Disengagement theory. The elderly are encouraged to abandon their occupational roles within the specialised division of Labour. So, this process of social disengagement allows the younger population to take their place.