300 Sozialwissenschaften
Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
Sprache
- Deutsch (53)
- Englisch (10)
- Portugiesisch (1)
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- nein (64)
Schlagworte
- ethnography (3)
- Biografieforschung (2)
- Diskursanalyse (2)
- Ethnografie (2)
- Foucault (2)
- Lebenswelt (2)
- Macht (2)
- biographical research (2)
- discourse analysis (2)
- power (2)
- (Interdiszipliniäre) Altersforschung (1)
- AdressatInnenforschung (1)
- Ageing (1)
- Alfred Schütz (1)
- Algorithms (1)
- Alleinleben (1)
- Alter (1)
- Asyl (1)
- Autodriving (1)
- Bangladesch (1)
- Beziehungsnetzwerk (1)
- Biographieforschung (1)
- Boundary-making practices (1)
- Childhood (1)
- Cop Culture (1)
- Coping (1)
- Corona (1)
- Covid (1)
- Demografischer Wandel (1)
- Demography (1)
- Dhaka (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- Digitalization (1)
- Diskursforschung (1)
- Diskurstheorie (1)
- Displacement (1)
- Dispositiv (1)
- Empirische Sozialforschung (1)
- Erlebnis (1)
- Ethnographie (1)
- Ethnomethodology (1)
- FOUCAULT (1)
- Fallstudien (1)
- Feldforschung (1)
- Flucht (1)
- Forschung (1)
- Forum Alterswissenschaft und Alterspolitik (1)
- Fotografie (1)
- Fotografie in Sozialforschung (1)
- Fotografie-Analyse (1)
- Gedächtnisforschung (1)
- Gouvernementalität (1)
- Green infrastructure (1)
- Habitus-Analyse (1)
- Handlungsorientierung (1)
- Harold Garfinkel (1)
- Hochschuldidaktik (1)
- Identität (1)
- Individualität (1)
- Interaction (1)
- Interkulturelle Erziehung (1)
- Interpretationswerkstatt (1)
- Intersektionalität (1)
- Jugend (1)
- Jugendarbeit (1)
- Jugendsozialarbeit (1)
- Kinderbuchforschung (1)
- Kleidung (1)
- Kreativität (1)
- Kritik (1)
- Körper (1)
- Körpertechniken (1)
- Later Life (1)
- Lebensbedingungen (1)
- Lehrerbildung (1)
- Linking Ages (1)
- Loneliness (1)
- Long-term care (1)
- Materiality (1)
- Medienpädagogik (1)
- Migration (1)
- Mode (1)
- Männlichkeit (1)
- Offenbach-Lohwaldsiedlung (1)
- Participation (1)
- Partizipative Forschung (1)
- Phenomenological sociology (1)
- Phenomenology of time consciousness (1)
- Photo Novella (1)
- Photo-Elicitation (1)
- Phänomenologie (1)
- Polizei (1)
- Polizeiforschung (1)
- Professionsforschung (1)
- Pädagogik (1)
- Qualitative Forschung (1)
- Qualitative Inhaltsanalyse (1)
- Recreation infrastructure (1)
- Reflex (1)
- Reflexive Fotografie (1)
- Reflexivität (1)
- Risk factors (1)
- Sozialer Brennpunkt (1)
- Subjektivierung (1)
- Subkultur (1)
- Technology (1)
- Temporality (1)
- Theatermethoden (1)
- Uniform(ität) (1)
- Urban heat (1)
- Visiting motives (1)
- Visualität (1)
- Visuelle Methodologie (1)
- Visuelle Sozialforschung (1)
- Vulnerability (1)
- Wissensarbeit (1)
- age-friendly cities and communities (1)
- ageing (1)
- asylum (1)
- ação política (1)
- biography (1)
- care (1)
- caring masculinities (1)
- case studies (1)
- citizenship (1)
- class conscience (1)
- classe social (1)
- comparative analysis (1)
- consciência de classe (1)
- cop culture (1)
- critical gerontology (1)
- critique (1)
- digitalisation (1)
- discourse research (1)
- discourse theory (1)
- discursive and non-discursive practices (1)
- discursive practices (1)
- diskursive Praxis (1)
- diskursive und nicht-diskursive Praktiken (1)
- dispositive (1)
- education science (1)
- environmental gerontology (1)
- interpretation groups (1)
- later life (1)
- life world studies (1)
- living alone (1)
- masculinities (1)
- memory research (1)
- men (1)
- migration (1)
- narrative interview (1)
- narratives Interview (1)
- neue Kindheitsforschung (1)
- new childhood research (1)
- participation (1)
- phenomenology (1)
- police (1)
- police culture (1)
- police research (1)
- policy review (1)
- political action (1)
- produção sistêmica (1)
- professions and clients/addressees (1)
- qualitative Methoden (1)
- qualitative methods (1)
- qualitative research (1)
- reflexivity (1)
- relationality (1)
- research on children's books (1)
- social class (1)
- spatial exclusion (1)
- subculture studies (1)
- systemic production (1)
- teacher training (1)
- techniques of theatre (1)
- urban sociology (1)
- visuality (1)
- young people (1)
- youth policy (1)
- youth transition regimes (1)
Institut
- Erziehungswissenschaften (64) (entfernen)
How can older adults participate equally in digitisation processes across Europe, and what inclusive research strategies are needed? This Zine summarizes findings from a “Research Innovation Lab on Ageing in a Digital Age”, funded by the VolkswagenStiftung, aiming to bring together 29 docs and postdocs anchored in 26 different disciplines coming from 11 countries, at all stages of their work, to address cutting edge questions relating to ageing in a digital age. Five groups worked together over five days in Frankfurt, Germany, in July 2023 in a creative and interactive hackathon, specific to developing non-technical solutions to social issues of this topic. Moreover, four distinguished experts presented keynote speeches and proposals from various conceptual, methodological and empirical perspectives.
Das partizipative Forschungsprojekt "Allein aber vernetzt? Digitale (Un)gleichheiten und soziale Netzwerke bei alleinlebenden Menschen" beschäftigte sich von 2021-2024 mit Alleinlebenden im Alter, ihren Beziehungsnetzwerken und der Frage welche Rolle digitale Geräte und die Digitalisierung aller Lebensbereiche in diesem Zusammenhang spielen. Durch die Zusammenarbeit mit einer Gruppe von Ko-Forschenden in Frankfurt und Egelsbach stand die Perspektive der Gruppe im Mittelpunkt.
Im vorliegenden White Paper wird das Projekt sowie zentrale Ergebnisse und die erarbeiteten Handlungsempfehlungen der deutschen Teilstudie vorgestellt. Diese wurde vom BMBF gefördert und ist Teil des europäischen Verbundprojektes "EQualCare - Alone but connected? Digital (in)equalities in care work and generational relationships among older people living alone" der Joint Programming Initiative (JPI) “More Years Better Lives”.
The paper reports on research that investigates older men's care practices and how their caring for others opens new ways of exploring the intersections of aging, gender, and care work. Using the concept caring masculinities as a sensitizing concept, the onus is on exploring patterns of power, interdependence, and relationality within men's care practices. Aging masculinities often remain constructed around paid-for occupational work (in opposition to unpaid care work) despite the transition into retirement. Little work exists on how caring is at work in later life potentially transforming gender relations and enacted masculinities. Moreover, much of the research on aging masculinities have not considered the expansiveness of retirement and the discourses as well as subjective expectations around the activity in later life that create an uncertain terrain of socioculturally structured mandates to be navigated. This paper draws on data from two qualitative interview studies conducted with retired men in England and Germany, in which the role of caregiving emerged as an inductive theme in their narratives. The paper makes a specific contribution to developing empirical and theoretical knowledge of caring masculinities and power relations by providing insights on men's trajectories into caring, and how they make sense of their caring for and about others.
Die neue Studie JuCo IV zeigt Langzeitfolgen der Pandemie auf: Der Forschungsverbund »Kindheit – Jugend – Familie in der Corona-Zeit« hat die Untersuchung im Februar 2023 durchgeführt. Johanna Wilmes, Erziehungswissenschaftlerin an der Goethe-Universität und Teil des Verbundes, erläutert die Ergebnisse.
Material gerontology poses the question of how aging processes are co-constituted in relation to different forms of (human and non-human) materiality. This paper makes a novel contribution by asking when aging processes are co-constituted and how these temporalities of aging are entangled with different forms of materiality. In this paper, we explore the entanglements of temporality and materiality in shaping later life by framing them as spacetimematters (Barad, 2013). By drawing on empirical examples from data from a qualitative case study in a long-term care (LTC) facility, we ask how the entanglement of materiality and temporality of a fall-detection sensor co-constitutes aging. We focus on two types of material temporality that came to matter in age-boundary-making practices at this site: the material temporality of a technology-in-training and the material temporality of (false) alarms. Both are interwoven, produced and reproduced through spacetimematterings that established age-boundaries. Against the backdrop of these findings, we propose to understand age(ing) as a situated, distributed, more-than-human process of practices: It emerges in an assemblage of technological innovation discourses, problematizations of demographic change, digitized and analog practices of care and caring, bodily functioning, daily routines, institutionalized spaces and much more. Finally, we discuss the role power plays in those spacetimematterings of aging and conclude with a research outlook for material gerontology.
An interdisciplinary group of researchers from both Israel and Germany came together in December 2021 to exchange and discuss findings on the effects of the COVID-pandemic on children and older adults in Israel and Germany.This white paper provides a selection of empirical research findings, policy recommenda-tions and identified blind spots for future research with respect to a “linking ages” perspec-tive. The authors emphasize on loneliness in early and late life from a specific social science perspective and based on a selected set of definitions.
The article re-examines the relationship between the works of Alfred Schütz and Harold Garfinkel, focusing on their respective approaches to temporality in interaction. Although there are good reasons to emphasize the differences between Schütz’s notion of individual projects of action and Garfinkel’s interest in communicative sequencing, there is also an interesting historical connection. In order to elucidate this connection, the article provides a close reading of the steps that lead Schütz from his premise of ‘egological’ time consciousness to his understanding of the reflexive and interactive process of meaning establishment and interpretation developed in his first book, The Phenomenology of the Social World (1967 [1932]). The article reflects further upon which aspects of Schütz’s considerations resonated with Garfinkel in his formative years and how Garfinkel related to them variously in his later development of ethnomethodology. Hence, it appears that Garfinkel’s ethnomethodology successively departs from many of Schütz’s premises while simultaneously incorporating and further developing some of his notions on the sequential organization and temporal flux of interactive processes.
The policy review is part of the project EQualCare: Alone but connected? Digital (in)equalities in care work and generational relationships among older people living alone, a three-year international project involving four countries: Finland, Germany, Latvia and Sweden. EQualCare interrogates inequalities by gender, cultural and socio-economic background between countries, with their different demographics and policy backgrounds. As a first step into empirical analysis, the policy review aims to set the stage for a better understanding of, and policy development on, the intersections of digitalisation with intergenerational care work and care relationships of older people living alone in Germany.
The policy review follows a critical approach, in which the problems policy documents address are not considered objective entities, but rather discursively produced knowledge that renders visible some parts of the problem which is to be solved as other possible perspectives are simultaneously excluded. Twenty publicly available documents were studied to analyse the processes in which definitions of care work and digital (in)equalities are circulated, translated and negotiated between the different levels of national government, regional governments and municipalities as well as other agencies in Germany.
The policy review consists of two parts: a background chapter providing information on the social structure of Germany, including the historical development of Germany after the Second World War, its political structure, information on the demographic situation with a focus on the 60+ age group, and the income of this age group. In addition, the background presents the structure of work and welfare, the organisation of care for old people, and the state of digitalisation in Germany. The analysis chapter includes a description of the method used as well as an overview of the documents chosen and analysed. The focus of this chapter is on the analysis of official documents that deal with the interplay of living alone in old age, care, and digitalisation.
The analysis identified four themes: firstly, ageing is framed largely as a challenge to society, whereas digitalisation is framed as a potential way to tackle social challenges, such as an ageing society. Secondly, challenges of ageing, such as need of care, are set at the individual level, requiring people to organise their care within their own families and immediate social networks, with state support following a principle of subsidiarity. Thirdly, voluntary peer support provides the basis for addressing digital support needs and strategies. Publications by lobby organisations highlight the important work done by voluntary peer support for digital training and the benefits this approach has; they also draw attention to the over-reliance on this form of unpaid support and call for an increase in professional support in ensuring all older people are supported in digital life. Fourthly, ageing as a hinderance to participation in digital life is seen as an interim challenge among younger old people already online.
In summary, the analysis shows that the connection between ageing and digitalisation remains a marginal topic in current politics. The focus on older people merely as a potential group at risk of being left behind implies a deficit perspective on ageing and a homogenising of a large and diverse age group. Lessons learnt from the pandemic should not be interpreted in a one-sided way, by merely acknowledging the increasing number of (older) people moving online, but by acknowledging intersecting inequalities that mitigate social participation.
Previous research has found higher levels of heatwave mortality and morbidity among urban residents with a migration background because of their social, health and environmental conditions. The purpose of the study was to investigate and compare heat induced changes in the outdoor recreation behaviours of Turkish migrants with those of non-migrants on hot days in Vienna. Specifically, the study compared coping behaviours due to heat such as inter-area, intra-area, temporal and activity displacement between migrants and non-migrants. The study interviewed 400 migrants and non-migrants in four public green spaces of different area sizes and asked about their outdoor recreation motives and activities, as well as behavioural changes, due to summer heat. Results show that migrants have different motives for visiting urban green spaces on hot days, and that they visit these less frequently on hot days compared to non-migrants. While both groups shift their outdoor uses more to shady areas and the cooler times of the day, more migrants visit green spaces in the afternoon, perform more energetic recreational activities, and use sunnier sites more frequently than non-migrants on hot days. Few migrants and non-migrants stated that they would visit alternative green spaces when it is hot. The results indicate that migrants’ behaviours result in higher heat exposure, while making less use of the opportunities larger green spaces such as forests can provide for heat relief. Recommendations on how green and city planners could reduce heat related health risks for both study groups are presented.