Place Attachment and Aging in Place: Preferences and Disruptions.

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY
Research on Aging Pub Date : 2024-03-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-01 DOI:10.1177/01640275231209683
William A V Clark, Rachel Ong ViforJ, Christopher Phelps
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This paper examines the links between place attachment and older persons' preferences to age in place, and factors that disrupt these preferences. We use data from the 2001-2021 Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey and panel-data modelling to confirm strong associations between several place attachment dimensions and aging-in-place preferences. Strong ties to children, strong social capital, residence in social housing, homeownership status, housing wealth, and home and neighborhood satisfaction are all positively linked to a stronger preference to age in place. Our findings reveal important differences between older homeowners and older non-owners. For owners, closeness to children is a strong predictor of aging-in-place preferences, although mortgage debt can trigger involuntary moves. For non-owners, tenure security achieved through longer durations at one's address of residence is linked to stronger aging-in-place preferences. However, private renters are more often exposed to involuntary moves. We discuss the policy implications of these disruptions.

把依恋和衰老放在适当的位置:偏好和干扰。
本文研究了场所依恋与老年人对在场所变老的偏好之间的联系,以及破坏这些偏好的因素。我们使用2001-2021年澳大利亚家庭、收入和劳动力动态调查的数据以及面板数据建模来确认几个地方依恋维度与就地老龄化偏好之间的强关联性。与儿童的紧密联系、强大的社会资本、社会住房的居住、住房拥有状况、住房财富以及家庭和社区满意度都与更强烈的就地年龄偏好呈正相关。我们的研究结果揭示了老年房主和老年非房主之间的重要差异。对于业主来说,与孩子的亲密关系是老龄化偏好的有力预测因素,尽管抵押贷款债务可能会引发非自愿流动。对于非业主来说,通过在居住地址停留更长时间来实现保有权保障与更强烈的就地老龄化偏好有关。然而,私人租房者更容易受到非自愿搬迁的影响。我们讨论这些干扰的政策影响。
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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来源期刊
Research on Aging
Research on Aging GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
59
期刊介绍: Research on Aging is an interdisciplinary journal designed to reflect the expanding role of research in the field of social gerontology. Research on Aging exists to provide for publication of research in the broad range of disciplines concerned with aging. Scholars from the disciplines of sociology, geriatrics, history, psychology, anthropology, public health, economics, political science, criminal justice, and social work are encouraged to contribute articles to the journal. Emphasis will be on materials of broad scope and cross-disciplinary interest. Assessment of the current state of knowledge is as important as provision of an outlet for new knowledge, so critical and review articles are welcomed. Systematic attention to particular topics will also be featured.
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