Population ageing and conjunctural action
Population ageing and conjunctural action
One of the most promising conceptual and empirical breakthroughs to emerge from combined anthropological and demographic thinking is the theory of conjunctural action. Developed in a sequence of articles and books by Jennifer Johnson-Hanks, this approach provides an effective alternative to rationalist decision-making models that have prevailed in population studies over the whole post-War period. Observation and analysis of vital conjunctures show how social, economic, and political differences between groups in society are manifested in individual agency at specific points across the life course, and how people’s behaviour in this way differentiates the many subpopulations making up a society. The approach thus addresses directly two major shortcomings in population research: the need to explain mechanisms underlying the evolution of population heterogeneity, and the dynamics that entrench inequalities. To date, the study of conjunctural action has been addressed chiefly to fertility. In this chapter, we explore how health issues facing older people, their families, and communities are illuminated by this approach, drawing on multi-site, longitudinal ethnographic and demographic research in Indonesia. We begin with the nature of uncertainty and vulnerability at older ages, and how it can be modelled across the life course. This leads to consideration of the dynamic relation between individual action and subpopulation memberships, and how it articulates the compositional demography of status, network, ethnic, and related subpopulation memberships.
ageing, lifecourse, vulnerability, indonesia
323-346
Kreager, Philip
355f5cb1-5a76-4f80-8a03-4a3b36b65121
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
b10e106a-4d5d-4f41-a7d2-9549ba425711
30 October 2020
Kreager, Philip
355f5cb1-5a76-4f80-8a03-4a3b36b65121
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
b10e106a-4d5d-4f41-a7d2-9549ba425711
Kreager, Philip and Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
(2020)
Population ageing and conjunctural action.
In,
Petit, Véronique, Qureshi, Kaveri, Charbit, Yves and Kreager, Philip
(eds.)
The Anthropological Demography of Health.
International Workshop on the Anthropological Demography of Health (29/03/17 - 31/03/17)
Oxford, United Kingdom.
Oxford University Press, .
(doi:10.1093/oso/9780198862437.003.0012).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
One of the most promising conceptual and empirical breakthroughs to emerge from combined anthropological and demographic thinking is the theory of conjunctural action. Developed in a sequence of articles and books by Jennifer Johnson-Hanks, this approach provides an effective alternative to rationalist decision-making models that have prevailed in population studies over the whole post-War period. Observation and analysis of vital conjunctures show how social, economic, and political differences between groups in society are manifested in individual agency at specific points across the life course, and how people’s behaviour in this way differentiates the many subpopulations making up a society. The approach thus addresses directly two major shortcomings in population research: the need to explain mechanisms underlying the evolution of population heterogeneity, and the dynamics that entrench inequalities. To date, the study of conjunctural action has been addressed chiefly to fertility. In this chapter, we explore how health issues facing older people, their families, and communities are illuminated by this approach, drawing on multi-site, longitudinal ethnographic and demographic research in Indonesia. We begin with the nature of uncertainty and vulnerability at older ages, and how it can be modelled across the life course. This leads to consideration of the dynamic relation between individual action and subpopulation memberships, and how it articulates the compositional demography of status, network, ethnic, and related subpopulation memberships.
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More information
In preparation date: 2018
Published date: 30 October 2020
Venue - Dates:
International Workshop on the Anthropological Demography of Health, Institute of Human Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2017-03-29 - 2017-03-31
Keywords:
ageing, lifecourse, vulnerability, indonesia
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 420869
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/420869
PURE UUID: 1015fca7-7f09-44cd-82ed-0f5b9bd24ff0
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Date deposited: 17 May 2018 16:30
Last modified: 13 Sep 2024 01:41
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Contributors
Author:
Philip Kreager
Editor:
Véronique Petit
Editor:
Kaveri Qureshi
Editor:
Yves Charbit
Editor:
Philip Kreager
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