Representing a new direction in scholarship on age-related disadvantage, PLACED-Lives conceptualises old-age exclusion as a function of the interrelationship between: older adult life course ruptures, and disrupted relationships with place. As such, the work addresses two crucial interconnected areas of study. Firstly, this involves the under-researched links between exclusion and a set of critical transitions, in the form of life ruptures, in the older adult life course. Secondly, it concerns the interconnections between older adult life course ruptures and the older adult relationship with place, and what these connections mean for experiences of exclusion in old-age.
The focus of PLACED-Lives on life-course ruptures is grounded in critical gerontological traditions, and responds in general terms to a broader paucity of research on later life transitions. Transitions, the events that surround them and the life trajectories that they produce have the power to construct deleterious and favourable impacts for older people, and their wider relational networks. They also implicate individual, collective, institutional and structural components. The focus on the older adult place relationship is positioned within the behavioural context of older people spending more time in their place, and a capability context of where age-related declines can mean older people are more susceptible to environmental factors.
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