Centre for Policy on Ageing
 

 

An aging India
 — perspectives, prospects, and policies
Author(s)Phoebe S Liebig, S Irudaya Rajan
PublisherThe Haworth Press, Inc., Binghamton, NY, 2004
Pages248 pp
SourceThe Haworth Press, Inc., 10 Alice Street, Binghamton, NY 13904-1580 USA. www.HaworthPress.com
KeywordsAgeing process ; Services ; Health services ; Social policy ; India.
AnnotationThis volume is the result of ideas developed in communications between the two editors, after completion of Liebig's Fulbright to India in 1997. The authors wanted to set out that demographics of ageing also challenge developing countries, and that these countries are of paramount interest to the World Bank and United Nations. By 2025, both China and India will account for 38% of the world's people aged 60+. India is undergoing profound changes, although it is still a largely agricultural economy with high rates of poverty for all age groups. The major social and economic challenges facing India are transforming traditional family life, where the role of women in particular is affecting elder care. Eleven chapters cover these complex issues. Two concluding chapters cover current advocacy work undertaken by various bodies, and the gradual development of policy for an ageing population in India. This book is co-published simultaneously in Journal of Aging & Social Policy, volume 15, nos 2/3, 2003. (KJ/RH)
Accession NumberCPA-040224205 B
ClassmarkBG: I: L: TM2: 7FA

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