Science, Technology and the Ageing Society

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A01=Tiago Moreira
Age identities
Age Measurement
ageing populations management
Ageing Society
Alzheimer's Disease
Amasa Walker
Assistive Technologies
Author_Tiago Moreira
Baltimore Longitudinal Study
Biological Age
biomedicalisation
Biomedicalisation of ageing
BLSA
Category=JBSP4
Contemporary Societies
Disease Specific Programmes
Epistemic Infrastructure
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Eugenic Agencement
expertise in ageing society transformation
Fatigue Laboratory
Functional Age
Functional Assessment
Gerontology
Gerontotechnology
Good Life
Harvard Fatigue Laboratory
health and social care research
Healthy ageing
IOI
Leigh Star
Liberal Welfare State
medical sociology
Nathan Shock
Old age
Prosthetic Environments
qualitative case studies
Science
social gerontology
Social Security Crises
Standards of age
STS
Technology and Society
Technology and the Ageing Society
Technoscientific Promises
Telecare
Tiago Moreira
UN
Work Ability Assessment

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138814127
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Dec 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Ageing is widely recognised as one of the social and economic challenges in the contemporary, globalised world, for which scientific, technological and medical solutions are continuously sought. This book proposes that science and technology also played a crucial role in the creation and transformation of the ageing society itself.

Drawing on existing work on science, technology and ageing in sociology, anthropology, history of science, geography and social gerontology, Science, Technology and the Ageing Society explores the complex, interweaving relationship between expertise, scientific and technological standards and social, normatively embedded age identities. Through a series of case studies focusing on older people, science and technology, medical research about ageing and ageing-related illnesses, and the role of expertise in the management of ageing populations, Moreira challenges the idea that aging is a problem for the individual and society.

Tracing the epistemic and technological infrastructures that underpin multiple of ways of aging, this timely volume is a crucial tool for undergraduate and graduate students interested in social gerontology, health and social care, sociology of aging, science and technology studies and medical sociology.

Tiago Moreira is Reader in Sociology at Durham University.

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