Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: the ageing societies of Central and Eastern Europe
- I Societal and Demographic Ageing in Europe
- II Selected Issues of Societal Ageing in Central and Eastern Europe
- III Social Policy Responses to Population Ageing in Central and Eastern Europe
- How do local politicians see the situation of older people in East and West Germany?
- Between Welfare State and Welfare Society. The Case of Home Care Services for the Old People in Poland
- Age management – Polish experiences
- The problem of population aging and system of social securities – construction of Demographic Reserve Fund
- New programmes for quality ageing in Slovenia
- The “Eastern-European Ageing Societies in Transition”
- The Oxford Institute of Ageing
How do local politicians see the situation of older people in East and West Germany?
from III - Social Policy Responses to Population Ageing in Central and Eastern Europe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: the ageing societies of Central and Eastern Europe
- I Societal and Demographic Ageing in Europe
- II Selected Issues of Societal Ageing in Central and Eastern Europe
- III Social Policy Responses to Population Ageing in Central and Eastern Europe
- How do local politicians see the situation of older people in East and West Germany?
- Between Welfare State and Welfare Society. The Case of Home Care Services for the Old People in Poland
- Age management – Polish experiences
- The problem of population aging and system of social securities – construction of Demographic Reserve Fund
- New programmes for quality ageing in Slovenia
- The “Eastern-European Ageing Societies in Transition”
- The Oxford Institute of Ageing
Summary
ABSTRACT
The aging of the population is a special feature of the demographic change and an unavoidable development of the next decades which poses a great challenge to post-modern societies. The response to it depends on physical and human resources of the respective society but also on the creativity of the people. In particular local politicians play a vital role in countering negative developments. Based on studies of expert-interviews with local politicians in East and West Germany the contribution shows how demographic changes are encountered in selected communes. On the agenda of the interviews was: the physical and social situation of old people, their integration into the society, age segregation, age-just infrastructure, relationship of the generations to each other, role of volunteer work, relevance of the topic “the ageing of the population” in the media.
Age is subjected to a change: the aging people are healthier, longer active and more mobile than formerly. Also this circumstance plays increasingly more often a role in local politics. In this respect attention will also be paid in the contribution to the topic “Population aging as Chance”.
Key words: older people, demographic change, local politicians.
Introduction
At the latest in the debates about the financing of pensions, it became clear what kind of problems Germany was facing. The German population is declining, fewer and fewer children are being born and at the same time people are becoming older and older.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Ageing Societies of Central and Eastern EuropeSome Problems - Some Solutions, pp. 127 - 142Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2008