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
New programmes for quality ageing in Slovenia
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
Introduction
Quality ageing and good intergenerational relations are two urgent assignments in today's western culture. In the First half of the 21st century the preservation of intergenerational solidarity will be one of the hardest tasks that European culture has faced so far in the last thousand years. The difficulties of this task are enhanced by problematic facts on three levels, corresponding to the three human dimensions – biophysical, psychosocial and noogenic:
1) the rapid increase in the percentage of old people in the population and good quality care for them is a difficult task in our modern economy and politics;
2) increasingly weakening interpersonal acquaintance, communication and work connection between the young, middle-aged and elderly generations present us with the even more demanding social and cultural task of renewing the connections between the generations;
3) a mass vacuum in experiencing the meaning of old age, and the closely connected tabooisation of old age confront people in all periods of life with the crucial human question about the meaning of life.
The major part of research and practical work on Anton Trstenjak Institute for gerontology and intergenerational relations in Slovenia is devoted precisely to the tasks involved in quality ageing and good intergenerational relations in present-day living conditions in Europe. The presentation concludes with a survey of the main programmes that have been developed, and introduced as widely as possible in local communities and institutions.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Ageing Societies of Central and Eastern EuropeSome Problems - Some Solutions, pp. 177 - 182Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2008