Title: Sociology of age.
POPLINE Document Number: 201485
Author(s):
Riley MW
Foner A
Waring J
Source citation:
In: Handbook of sociology, [edited by] Neil J. Smelser. Newbury Park, California, Sage Publications, 1988. :243-90.
Abstract:
Sociology of age is both 1) aging over the life course as a social process and 2) age as a structural feature of changing societies and groups, as both people and roles are differentiated by age. This chapter describes the emerging special field of sociology that crosscuts other sociological fields and shows how these 2 clearly distinct topics are interdependent. Neither can be understood without the other. Aging processes and age structures form a system of interdependent parts, an "age stratification system." The emerging understandings of aging processes, changing age structures, and the complex interplay between them are illustrated in this chapter by both old and new sociological studies. Following the introduction of a conceptual framework for use in locating the works under review, the chapter arbitrarily arranges the discussion of age stratification systems in 3 sections. Studies on aging or the "life course" focus on individuals whose lives are shaped through interactions with the social structures. Studies on age structure focus on age structure of roles - changing as society changes - in which age defines the social locations of people alive at any given time. Linking these 2 sets of studies are studies of cohort flow, as cohorts of people born at the same time not only express changing patterns in the aging process but also form the structures of people who occupy the various roles in the age strata.
Keywords:
GlobalIndex page
United States
Sociology
Age Factors
Cohort Analysis
Employment Status
Social Development
Health
Labor Force
Family Characteristics
Changes
Women
Developed Countries
North America
Americas
Social Sciences
Population Characteristics
Demographic Factors
Population
Research Methodology
Socioeconomic Status
Socioeconomic Factors
Economic Factors
Human Resources
Family and Household
Social Change