Innovative models of aging in place: Transforming our communities for an aging population

As the proportion of the global population over 60 continues to grow, the issue of where and how elders are going to live becomes increasingly pressing. The idea or “aging in place” – in which elders remain in their own homes and communities – is becoming an increasingly popular alternative to age-segregated retirement communities. This article documents three new models of aging in place – naturally occurring retirement communities (NORC-SSPs), villages and campus-affiliated communities – and explores how they seek to provide both services and meaningful connections among members. Data from interviews and site visits reveal both promising practices as well as challenges such as how to ensure access for low and moderate-income elders, integrating elders from diverse cultural and linguistic back grounds, and building the leadership and participation of elders. By looking critically at these models, the author argues that many previously held theories and assumptions about the aging process and social capital formation must be reexamined in light of the agency of elders and the new organizational models. Ultimately the design of our communities – both physically and socially – and our approach to retirement must be restructured to support the needs of an aging population.

[1]  R. Gottlieb The Next Los Angeles: The Struggle for a Livable City , 2005 .

[2]  Robert J. Wuthnow,et al.  Loose Connections: Joining Together in America's Fragmented Communities , 1998 .

[3]  M. Gillick The Denial of Aging: Perpetual Youth, Eternal Life, and Other Dangerous Fantasies , 2006 .

[4]  Lotte Bailyn,et al.  Time in careers - careers in time , 2004 .

[5]  Lotte Bailyn,et al.  Breaking the Mold: Redesigning Work for Productive and Satisfying Lives , 1993 .

[6]  M. Harrington,et al.  Family caregivers: a shadow workforce in the geriatric health care system? , 2007, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[7]  Glenn C. Loury,et al.  A Dynamic Theory of Racial Income Differences , 1976 .

[8]  A. Hochschild The Unexpected Community: Portrait Of An Old Age Subculture , 1979 .

[9]  J. Jacobs The Death and Life of Great American Cities , 1962 .

[10]  R. Putnam Bowling Alone: America's Declining Social Capital , 1995, The City Reader.

[11]  P. Moen,et al.  The Career Mystique: Cracks in the American Dream , 2004 .

[12]  Dimitrina S. Dimitrova,et al.  Computer Networks as Social Networks: Collaborative Work, Telework, and Virtual Community , 1996 .

[13]  T. Skocpol,et al.  Civic Engagement in American Democracy , 1999 .

[14]  P. Moen,et al.  A life course perspective on retirement, gender, and well-being. , 1996, Journal of occupational health psychology.

[15]  D. Handelman,et al.  Old People, New Lives: Community Creation in a Retirement Residence. , 1978 .

[16]  L. E. Ross,et al.  Naturally occurring retirement communities: a multiattribute examination of desirability factors. , 1990, The Gerontologist.

[17]  John P. Kretzman,et al.  Building Communities from the Inside Out: A Path Toward Finding and Mobilizing a Community's Assets , 1993 .

[18]  J. Richardson Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education , 1986 .

[19]  J. Coleman,et al.  Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital , 1988, American Journal of Sociology.

[20]  Marc Encore: Finding Work that Matters in the Second Half of Life , 2007 .

[21]  Michael E. Hunt ArchD,et al.  Naturally Occurring Retirement Communities , 1986 .

[22]  Robert D. Putnam,et al.  Bowling alone: the collapse and revival of American community , 2000, CSCW '00.

[23]  J. Keith Old People, New Lives: Community Creation in a Retirement Residence , 1982 .