It’s not how old you are, it’s how you are old. State discourse on successful ageing in Singapore

M. Brooke
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT According to Asher and Nandy, the global population of seniors will increase to 1.41 million in 2030 and is predicted to further grow to 2 billion by 2050. This will cause a fundamental change in the world’s ageing structure, with the number of seniors equal to the child population (0–14 years). Today, seniors are being encouraged to be part of the workforce for as long as possible to cater for this shift. One of the means to achieve this is to stay healthy through regular engagement in physical activity. This paper takes Singapore as a case study. Its purpose is to examine the relationship between the discourses on successful ageing, physical activity and employment in Singapore and how these are embodied by local seniors in their everyday lives. It asks whether this demographic group should be predominantly doing menial work and should their salaries be significantly lower than their younger counterparts? Is it right to use a discourse that links work to physical activity, and therefore health, and to make this a part of ageing successfully?
重要的不是你有多大,而是你怎么变老。新加坡成功老龄化的国家演讲
根据Asher和Nandy的研究,全球老年人口将在2030年增加到141万,预计到2050年将进一步增加到20亿。这将导致世界老龄化结构发生根本性变化,老年人数量将与儿童人口(0-14岁)持平。如今,老年人被鼓励尽可能长时间地成为劳动力的一部分,以适应这种转变。实现这一目标的方法之一是通过定期参加体育活动来保持健康。本文以新加坡为个案进行研究。其目的是研究新加坡关于成功老龄化、体育活动和就业的话语之间的关系,以及这些话语如何在当地老年人的日常生活中体现出来。它提出的问题是,这个人口群体是否应该主要从事卑微的工作,他们的工资是否应该明显低于年轻的同龄人?将工作与身体活动联系起来,从而将其与健康联系起来,并将其作为成功老龄化的一部分,这种说法正确吗?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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