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  • Kath. HS Sozialwesen  (4)
  • IGB Berlin
  • Müncheberg ZALF
  • Ausgrenzung  (4)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berlin : De Gruyter
    UID:
    gbv_840820380
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (XII, 379 Seiten) , Diagramme
    ISBN: 9783110437041 , 9783110444414
    Series Statement: De Gruyter open
    Content: SHARE is an international survey designed to answer the societal challenges that face us due to rapid population ageing. How do we Europeans age? How will we do economically, socially and healthwise? How are these domains interrelated? The authors of this multidisciplinary book have taken a further big step towards answering these questions based on the recent SHARE data in order to support policies for an inclusive society.
    Note: open access , Frontmatter -- Contents -- Editors -- Contributors -- 1 SHARE: a European policy device for inclusive ageing societies -- Part I. Material deprivation and social exclusion – extending analysis using Wave 5 data -- 2. Material deprivation items in SHARE Wave 5 data: a contribution to a better understanding of differences in material conditions in later life -- 3. Accessibility to neighbourhood services and well-being among older Europeans -- 4. Assessing the material deprivation of older Europeans -- 5. Development and validation of a material deprivation index -- 6. Measuring social deprivation and social exclusion -- 7. Material and social deprivation in the macroeconomic context -- Part II. Deprivation and social exclusion: causes and implications -- 8. Does hearing impairment lead to social exclusion? -- 9. Older adults living with cognitive and mobility-related limitations: social deprivation and forms of care received -- 10. Who can realise their retirement plans? Poor health and employment crises as factors of exclusion -- 11. Social inequalities in oral health – towards targeted health policy interventions -- 12. Slipping into poverty: effects on mental and physical health -- 13. Social cohesiveness and neighbourhood environmental deprivation: how are they related to life satisfaction in late life? -- Part III. Inclusion and social cohesiveness -- 14. Social exclusion and support between generations -- 15. Loneliness in Europe: do perceived neighbourhood characteristics matter? -- 16. Loneliness among informal caregivers aged 50+ in Europe -- 17. Social exclusion, welfare regime and unmet long-term care need: evidence from SHARE -- 18. Growing old abroad: social and material deprivation among first- and secondgeneration migrants in Europe -- 19. Is there a European land of opportunity? Cross-country differences in intergenerational mobility in 14 European countries and Israel -- Part IV. Employment, social inclusion and social protection -- 20. Coping with risks during the Great Recession -- 21. Reverse mortgage: a tool to reduce old age poverty without sacrificing social inclusion -- 22. Becoming self-employed at ages 50+: true entrepreneurship or exclusion from (wage-)employment? -- 23. Does training help retaining older workers into employment? Evidence from the SHARE survey -- 24. Early retirement for the underprivileged? Using the record-linked SHARE-RV data to evaluate the most recent German pension reform -- 25. The use of PC at work and job satisfaction -- Part V. Health and health care -- 26. Forgone visits to the doctor due to cost or lengthy waiting time among older adults in Europe -- 27. Health insurance coverage and access to care among European elders: crossnational differences and social gradients -- 28. Pain and social exclusion among the European older people -- 29. The educational gradient in life expectancy in Europe: preliminary evidence from SHARE -- 30. Unmet need for long-term care and social exclusion -- 31. Eligibility regulations and formal home-care utilisation among the vulnerable older people in SHARE Wave 5 -- 32. Long-term care insurance across Europe -- 33. Long-term care insurance and the family: does the availability of potential caregivers substitute for long-term care insurance?
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783110444124
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Ageing in Europe - supporting policies for an inclusive society Berlin : de Gruyter, 2015 ISBN 3110444127
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783110444124
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Ageing in Europe - supporting policies for an inclusive society Berlin : de Gruyter, 2015 ISBN 3110444127
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783110444124
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ethnology
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Europa ; Armut ; Älterer Mensch ; Ausgrenzung ; Inklusion ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (Open Access)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover  (lizenzpflichtig)
    Author information: Börsch-Supan, Axel 1954-
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_558282555
    ISSN: 2365-6565
    Content: Die kirchlichen Wohlfahrtsverbände, so berichtet der Direktor des Caritasverbandes Hildesheim, werden wieder zunehmend mit Armut konfrontiert. Dabei bleibt auch ihnen die extreme Armut eher unbekannt, weil die davon Betroffenen nicht nur ihre Ansprüche gegenüber dem Sozialstaat nicht wahrnehmen, sondern auch den Zugang zu den Beratungsdiensten und anderen Einrichtungen oft nicht finden. Unter diesen Bedingungen haben die Wohlfahrtsverbände ihren Anspruch, Anwälte der "Recht? und Stimmlosen" zu sein, neu zu bestimmen. Theologische Unterstützung seitens der Sozialethik kämen ihnen da recht. Allerdings hat das Thema Armut die Sozialethik bislang noch nicht richtig erreicht.
    Content: The church-based charitable organisations are confronted with poverty again. Extreme poverty, however, often remains an unfamiliar phenomenon to those organisations, since the persons concerned tend to claim neither welfare nor the legal or psychological support church-based charity has to offer. In that situation the charitable organisations need to readjust their advocacy of «those without rights and a voice». In that readjustment, theological support through social ethic thought would be helpful. The new issue of poverty, however, does not yet seem to be on the ethical agenda.
    Note: Literaturverz
    In: Ethik und Gesellschaft, Köln : Ketteler, 2007, (2007), 1, Seite 1-7, 2365-6565
    In: year:2007
    In: number:1
    In: pages:1-7
    Language: German
    Keywords: Sozialethik ; Sozialstaat ; Armut ; Ausgrenzung ; Wohlfahrtsverband ; Bildungspolitik
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_60228225X
    ISSN: 1613-8953
    Content: Most young people in the UK make relatively "successful", unproblematic transitions from school to work and adulthood. What do we call those that not do? Labels imply explanation, not just description. Terms with academic and policy currency tend to define such young people by something they are not or by their presumed social and economic distance and dislocation from "the rest". How we might best describe, explain and label the experience and problem of so-called "socially excluded", "disconnected youth" is the focus of the paper. It draws upon extensice qualitative research with young adults growing up in some of Britainś poorest neighbourhoods, looking particulary at their labor market transition. Some of the problems and inaccuracies of underclass theory and orthodox conceptualisations of social exclusion are discussed in the light of empirical findings. Following CW Mills, the youthful biographies descriebed are set in a wider panorama of social structure and economic opportunity, particulary the rapid de-industrialisation of the locality studied. Understanding these historical processes of socio-economic change leads to the conclusion that, in short hand, "the economically marginal" is the best descriptive label of research participants and "economic marginalisation" in the best explanation of their condition.
    Note: Literaturverz. S. 13-16
    In: Social work & society, Essen : Univ. Duisburg-Essen, Inst. für Soziale Arbeit und Sozialpolitik, 2003, 6(2008), 2, Seite 16, 1613-8953
    In: volume:6
    In: year:2008
    In: number:2
    In: pages:16
    Language: German
    Keywords: Jugend ; Ausgrenzung ; Wirtschaft ; Arbeitsmarkt ; Großbritannien
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_558314082
    ISSN: 2365-6565
    Content: Die ethnische Segregation von Migranten in Parallelgesellschaften wird häufig als Desintegration kritisiert. Aus sozialethischer Perspektive ist die kulturelle Differenz legitim, sofern die freiheitlich-demokratische Grundordnung anerkannt wird. Problematisch ist jedoch die Lebenslage von sozial benachteiligten Migranten, die ihnen ein Leben außerhalb von ethnischen Kolonien erschwert. Ethnische Kolonien können die soziale, wirtschaftliche und politische Integration von Migranten sowohl hemmen als auch fördern. Um ihr Integrationspotenzial auszuschöpfen, sind ein offenes gesellschaftliches Klima, das Engagement gut situierter Migranten und weiteres nötig. Statt die ethnische Segregation zu dramatisieren, sollte die deutsche Politik die Bildung geeigneter Migrantenselbstorganisationen anregen und fördern.
    Content: The ethnical segregation of migrants in «ethnic communities» is frequently criticised as social disintegration. From a point of view rooted in catholic social teaching this cultural difference may be legitimate, as long as the liberal-democratic order is being recognised. However, the living conditions of socially disadvantaged migrants are problematic and make a life outside ethnic communities difficult. Ethnic communities are able to do both, either inhibit or promote the social, economic and political integration of migrants. In order to fully draw from their potential of integration in an open social environment, the commitment of well-to-do migrants and other conditions need to be fulfilled. Instead of dramatising ethnical segregation, German politics should stimulate and promote the formation of qualified self-organisations of migrants.
    Note: Literaturverz
    In: Ethik und Gesellschaft, Köln : Ketteler, 2007, (2007), 1, Seite 1-41, 2365-6565
    In: year:2007
    In: number:1
    In: pages:1-41
    Language: German
    Keywords: Ausgrenzung ; Sozialethik ; Migration ; Segregation
    Author information: Fisch, Andreas 1971-
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