Read more
List of contents
Introduction – Ageing as a migrant: vulnerabilities, agency and policy implications 1. Unpacking the ageing–migration nexus and challenging the vulnerability trope 2. The role of religion in protecting older Romanian migrants from loneliness 3. ‘A totally new world has been opening up for me’ – experiences of older German migrants who are actively involved in the German-speaking community in Ottawa, Canada 4. Social ties and embeddedness in old age: older Turkish labour migrants in Vienna 5. Forms of care among native Swiss and older migrants from Southern Europe: a comparison 6. Older migrants in Luxembourg – care preferences for old age between family and professional services 7. Growing old in exile – a longitudinal study of migrant women from Turkey 8. Cross-border mobility and long-distance communication as modes of care circulation: insights from the Peruvian ‘zero generation’ 9. Transnational ageing and the ‘zero generation’: the role of Moroccan migrants’ parents in care circulation
About the author
Ruxandra Oana Ciobanu is Assistant Professor in the Institute of Demography and Socioeconomics, and research group leader in the Centre for the Interdisciplinary Study of Gerontology and Vulnerability, at the University of Geneva, Switzerland. Her research interests include older migrants, international migration, the welfare mix, transnational processes, and qualitative research methods.
Tineke Fokkema is Senior Researcher at the Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute, and Professor of Ageing, Families and Migration at Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The central topic of her research is the ageing of populations, in particular the social wellbeing of (migrant) older adults and the patterns of intergenerational solidarity and exchange.
Mihaela Nedelcu is titular Professor in the Institute of Sociology at the University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland, and project leader within the National Center of Competence in Research "NCCR-on the move". Her research areas include transnational ageing, intergenerational solidarities within transnational families, and migratory dynamics in the digital era.
Summary
Motivated by the steady increase in the population of older migrants worldwide, this book acknowledges this groups diversity and provides an interdisciplinary, multi-level approach for studying older migrants’strategies to overcome vulnerability. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.