Author:
Taylor Philip,Loretto Wendy,Marshall Victor,Earl Catherine,Phillipson Christopher
Abstract
The roles that older workers play in labour markets has received a great deal of policy and academic scrutiny in response to economic crises and demographic change. As a starting point, this focus has paradoxically resulted in insufficient attention to older workers themselves. The article is thus concerned with refocusing the agenda for research onto the older worker. Building on an extensive literature review, four gaps in knowledge are identified: who might be researched; what the focus of that research might be; the role of theory informing the research; and how the research might be conducted. The article identifies a particular need for research on ‘work’ as opposed to ‘retirement’ and how the changing nature of work may influence future patterns of later life labour market engagement and retirement. It is argued that better public policy will result from more critical and socially embedded research that recognises the heterogeneity of ‘older workers’ and their motivations.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Reference69 articles.
1. OECD (2015) Ageing and Employment Policies: Statistics on Average Effective Age of Retirement, http://www.oecd.org/els/emp/ageingandemploymentpoliciesstatisticsonaverageeffectiveageofretirement.htm [accessed 18.10.2015].
2. The SAGE Handbook of Aging, Work and Society
3. The Structured Dependency of the Elderly: A Creation of Social Policy in the Twentieth Century
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