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An introduction
Anca Dohotariu

This chapter introduces the topic of care for older people as inherently political and gendered and the related politicising and gendering processes in Europe. First, it presents the epistemological and academic motivations underpinning the need to elaborate a multidisciplinary collective volume on a topic that has not been tackled and developed previously. One of the most important reasons informing this choice is that both politicising and gendering care for older people are two transversal processes that share the same reference to some inherent and pervasive features of care, namely care as political and gendered by definition. Second, the chapter introduces a conceptual background indispensable to establishing a clearly defined focus of all contributions to the book. Neither exhaustive nor providing a deductive approach or theoretical framework shared by all chapters, this conceptual background concerning politicising and gendering care for older people in Europe serves as a reference tool guiding different country-based and multi-level analyses. Its primary role is to introduce one clearly outlined exploration interest while opening up diverse research questions and multidisciplinary studies. Third, the introductory chapter presents the book’s structure and the topics, questions, and research directions addressed by each contribution to the volume. These multidisciplinary investigations depend primarily on the specific and relevant aspects concerning politicising and gendering care for older people and how these occur in different European settings and at societal and political levels.

in Politicising and gendering care for older people
Multidisciplinary perspectives from Europe

This book offers a new analytical framework for the multi-layered processes of politicising and gendering care for older people, understood as an inherently political and gendered condition of human existence. It brings together contributions that focus on different manifestations and interpretations of these processes in several European settings and at various societal and political levels. It investigates how care for older adults varies across time and place and aims to provide an in-depth comprehension of how it becomes an arena of political struggle and the object of public policy and political intervention. The book comprises multidisciplinary research stemming from gender studies, history, political science, public policy, social anthropology, social work, and sociology. These analyses examine the issue of care for older people as a political concern from many angles, such as problematising care needs, long-term care policies, home care services, institutional services, and family care. The book’s contributions reveal the diversity of situations in which the processes of politicising and gendering care for older adults overlap, contradict, or reinforce each other while leading to increased gender (in)equalities on different levels – familial, professional, and societal. Both caring for older adults or being taken care of when becoming old(er) or frail are potentially a feature of any personal trajectory, which is always contextually situated. Therefore, this book is an invitation to reflect upon care for older people as an issue particularly significant at any time and relevant at any societal level or socio-political sphere.