This article starts with a critique of the literature relating to the living at
home/living in a home contrast. It shows this body of work to be dominated
by a structured dependency paradigm which depicts residential care as
exemplar of institution and home as embodying personal control and self-
identity. A modification of the paradigm which gives prominence to diversity
and meaning is used to analyse in-depth interviews with frail older people
living at home and in a home. The analysis suggests that the prevailing
account of residential care needs updating and some revision. The article
concludes that the marketisation of social care has had both positive and
negative effects on both care delivery in a home and at home. It also contends
that there is a limited demand from older people for collective living
arrangements and that institutionalisation processes affect older people in
whatever setting.