Older Adults and Gentrification: The Positive Role of Social Policy.

Joyce Weil, Ronica N Rooks, Emily E Leonard, Emily Evans
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Abstract

Supportive public policies are suggested as ways to lessen gentrification's impact for older adults. While explicit policies designed to help older adults with gentrification are rare, literature on age-friendly cities is a close proxy. We utilized three North American cases undergoing gentrification: New York City, NY, and Denver, CO, in the United States and Hamilton, in Ontario, Canada, to present existing neighbourhood-based policies as social determinants of health in housing, resource access, healthcare, transportation, and communal places. Age-friendly policy application gap examples and COVID-19's impact were included. Using a qualitative comparative case study method, we found policies were not specifically designed to address older adults' gentrification needs. With the call for age-friendly designations, the role of gentrification in neighbourhoods with older populations must be included. We call for gentrification-specific policies for older adults to provide greater safeguards especially when events such as COVID-19 compete for existing, over-stretched resources.

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老年人与城市化:社会政策的积极作用》。
有人建议采取支持性公共政策来减轻城市化对老年人的影响。虽然旨在帮助老年人应对城市化的明确政策并不多见,但有关老年友好型城市的文献却可以作为近似的参考。我们利用了三个正在经历城市化的北美案例:美国纽约州纽约市和科罗拉多州丹佛市,以及加拿大安大略省汉密尔顿市,介绍了在住房、资源获取、医疗保健、交通和公共场所等方面作为健康社会决定因素的现有邻里政策。其中包括老年友好政策应用差距实例和 COVID-19 的影响。通过采用定性比较案例研究方法,我们发现相关政策并非专门针对老年人的城市化需求而设计。随着对年龄友好型称号的呼吁,必须将有老年人口的社区中的城市化问题包括在内。我们呼吁制定专门针对老年人的城市化政策,以提供更多保障,尤其是在 COVID-19 等活动争夺现有的、捉襟见肘的资源时。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
109
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal on Aging/La Revue canadienne du vieillissement (CJA/RCV) promotes excellence in research and disseminates the latest work of researchers in the social sciences, humanities, health and biological sciences who study the older population of Canada and other countries; informs policy debates relevant to aging through the publication of the highest quality research; seeks to improve the quality of life for Canada"s older population and for older populations in other parts of the world through the publication of research that focuses on the broad range of relevant issues from income security to family relationships to service delivery and best practices.
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