Inequalities of Aging: Paradoxes of Independence in American Home Care – Elana D. Buch

Author: Elana D. Buch
Publisher: NYU Press
Year of Publication: 2018
Print Length: 288 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction / Social Science
Area: The United States of America (USA)
People: American
Topic: Empathy, Equality & Inequality, Humanity, Impartiality, Independence, Neutrality (The Humanitarian Principles)
Paid home care is one of the fastest growing occupations in the United States, and millions of Americans rely on these workers to help them remain at home as they grow older. However, the industry is rife with contradictions. The United States spends a fortune on medical care, yet devotes comparatively few resources on improving wages, thus placing home care providers in the ranks of the working poor. As a result, the work that enables some older Americans to live independently generates profound social inequalities.
Inequalities of Aging explores the ways in which these inequalities play out on the ground as workers, who are disproportionately women of color and immigrants, earn poverty-level wages and often struggle to provide for themselves and their families. The ethnographic narrative reveals how two of the nation’s most pressing concerns―rising social inequality and caring for an aging population―intersect to transform the lives of older adults, home care workers, and the world around them.
The book takes readers inside the homes and offices of people connected to two Chicago area home care agencies serving low-income and affluent older adults, respectively. Through intimate portrayals of daily life, Elana D. Buch illustrates how diverse histories, care practices, and social policies overlap and contribute to social inequality. Illuminating the lived experience of both workers and their clients, Inequalities of Aging shows the different ways in which the idea of independence both connects and shapes the lives of the elderly and the working poor.
Table of Contents
List of Abbreviations
List of Key People
Introduction
1. Generating Independence: Older Adults’ Life Histories
2. Inheriting Care: Home Care Workers’ Lives
3. Making Care Work: Training and Supervision in Home Care Agencies
4. Embodying Inequality: Empathy and Hierarchy in Daily Care
5. Independent Living: Housekeeping as Personkeeping
6. Care Falls Apart: Turnover and the Limits of Independence
Conclusion 201
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author

Elana D. Buch is a sociocultural and medical anthropologist studying aging, care, kinship, and inequality in the United States. I ask questions about how different ways of practicing human interdependence are connected to large scale social changes like population aging, and how these forms of interdependence generate social difference and inequality across the life course.
Source: https://anthropology.uiowa.edu/people/elana-buch
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