查詢結果分析
來源資料
相關文獻
- Unity and Diversity in the Living Arrangements of Older Adults in Different Regions of Europe
- Change of Living Arrangements and Its Consequences Among the Elderly in Taiwan
- Living Apart from One's Children in Later Life--The Case of Taiwan
- Living Arrangements and Economic Support for the Elderly in Taiwan
- 歐洲各國老人自評健康狀況的比較研究
- 臺灣老人的居住安排與問題
- 台灣老人的居住安排與住宅問題
- The Determinants of Satisfaction with Living Arrangements for the Elderly in Taiwan
- 臺灣地區鰥寡老人之居住安排
- 臺灣地區老人遷移類型及居住安排間關係之決定因素探討
頁籤選單縮合
題 名 | Unity and Diversity in the Living Arrangements of Older Adults in Different Regions of Europe=歐洲各區老人居住安排的異同 |
---|---|
作 者 | 鶴珍妮; 柯瓊芳; | 書刊名 | 歐美研究 |
卷 期 | 31:3 2001.09[民90.09] |
頁 次 | 頁461-517 |
分類號 | 544.8 |
關鍵詞 | 居住安排; 老人; 第二次人口轉型; 歐洲; Living arrangements; Elderly people; Second demographic transition; Europe; |
語 文 | 英文(English) |
中文摘要 | 由於經濟與文化的牽連,歐洲各國共同享有一個關係密切的過去。一九六○年代以來的文化價值變遷,諸如世俗化與個人主義的盛行,影響了年輕人及老年人的規範與價值。作者根據UN ECE的「老年生活面面觀」(Dynamic of Aging) 研究計劃來驗證這些文化價值變遷對老人居住安排的影響。資料顯示,獨立感與自主性的萌發影響了歐洲老人的日常居家生活方式:絕大多數的已婚老人與配偶單獨居住,超過一半的寡婦則選擇獨居。不過歐洲老人的居住安排亦不乏多樣性,在南歐及東歐,喪偶老老人多住在二代或三代同堂的家戶中;在北歐及西歐則少見這樣的例子。年輕人與老年人對於家庭的看法以及經濟來源的不同是造成這些歧異的主要潛因。 |
英文摘要 | European countries share a history of close ties. They have long been linked economically as well as through cultural ties. Cultural changes such as secularization and individualization that have taken place since the 1960s have influenced the common norms and values of both young and old. In investigating the effects of these changes on the living arrangements of older people data are used from the “Dynamics of Aging” project, of the Population Activities Unit of the UN ECE. The data show that developments directed towards independence and self-determination are affecting the daily lives of older persons: older married people in Europe live predominantly as couples in households without other persons, and over fifty percent of all widows live in one-person households. Diversity in the patterns of living arrangements of older persons in Europe is registered in that living in a two-or three-generation household is still relatively common among the oldest-old widowed persons in southern and eastern Europe, while being virtually absent in northern and western Europe. Differences in family values and in the financial resources of young and old people underlie this diversity. |
本系統中英文摘要資訊取自各篇刊載內容。