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Vulnerable, heroic … or invisible? Representations versus realities of later life in Indonesia

Vulnerable, heroic … or invisible? Representations versus realities of later life in Indonesia
Vulnerable, heroic … or invisible? Representations versus realities of later life in Indonesia

Indonesia, like many rapidly ageing lower-middle-income countries (LMICs), tends to portray older citizens as ‘vulnerable’ and ‘dependent’; yet the country has few public policies to support them. To this discourse, an alternative stereotype is emerging, influenced by notions of ‘successful ageing’, which promotes models of older people as healthy and contributing to families and the nation state. In this article, we argue that both stereotypes ignore the varied and context-specific conditions of later life. Importantly, the dominant representations ignore the frailty and dependence that many people in LMICs experience towards the end of their lives. This results in dependence and frailty being concealed from view and treated as a purely familial responsibility, which households living in economic, social and demographic precarity can ill afford. ‘Familism by default’ spells invisible, unsupported and unsustainable care for many older Indonesians. This article draws on ethnographic fieldwork between 2018 and 2022 from two research projects on ageing, livelihoods, vulnerability and care in disparate communities across Indonesia. By juxtaposing dominant representations with the social, economic and health realities in which lives are lived, we trace the implications for policies, values and practices around care in later life.

Ageing, care, dependence, frailty, Indonesia, vulnerability
1464-9934
408–426
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
b10e106a-4d5d-4f41-a7d2-9549ba425711
Porath, Nathan
3ec6e51c-ceb8-46e2-8fd0-71a416f0f095
Handajani, Yvonne Suzy
ce79656a-4c33-4d30-a1d1-cd96b90a21aa
Larastiti, Ciptaningrat
c6bba7e7-8044-4c56-92f5-68ace0a9d062
Delpada, Benidiktus
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Hogervorst, Eef
d3cb1ae1-86b7-47d4-84b2-d124fddb0c30
Insriani, Hezti
4cf55e96-440b-4162-8db1-b737bb0da1e9
Jelly,
af24b52b-a040-45c2-960b-741c0df6b97b
Kreager, Philip
76780e0b-9ce5-4e02-9d60-005e7aab8534
Rahayuningtyas, Dyah
684fbe9d-7358-40a6-ab31-334c789f446a
Sare, Florencia Yuniferti
5f4e11cb-7373-4502-a8d1-af16688cd59a
Tresno,
5dac6a6b-1f65-4a61-958e-c87dd5a38815
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
b10e106a-4d5d-4f41-a7d2-9549ba425711
Porath, Nathan
3ec6e51c-ceb8-46e2-8fd0-71a416f0f095
Handajani, Yvonne Suzy
ce79656a-4c33-4d30-a1d1-cd96b90a21aa
Larastiti, Ciptaningrat
c6bba7e7-8044-4c56-92f5-68ace0a9d062
Delpada, Benidiktus
04f37d82-62d0-4321-bf26-5a9ba6313664
Hogervorst, Eef
d3cb1ae1-86b7-47d4-84b2-d124fddb0c30
Insriani, Hezti
4cf55e96-440b-4162-8db1-b737bb0da1e9
Jelly,
af24b52b-a040-45c2-960b-741c0df6b97b
Kreager, Philip
76780e0b-9ce5-4e02-9d60-005e7aab8534
Rahayuningtyas, Dyah
684fbe9d-7358-40a6-ab31-334c789f446a
Sare, Florencia Yuniferti
5f4e11cb-7373-4502-a8d1-af16688cd59a
Tresno,
5dac6a6b-1f65-4a61-958e-c87dd5a38815

Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth, Porath, Nathan, Handajani, Yvonne Suzy, Larastiti, Ciptaningrat, Delpada, Benidiktus, Hogervorst, Eef, Insriani, Hezti, Jelly, , Kreager, Philip, Rahayuningtyas, Dyah, Sare, Florencia Yuniferti and Tresno, (2023) Vulnerable, heroic … or invisible? Representations versus realities of later life in Indonesia. Progress in Development Studies, 23 (4), 408–426. (doi:10.1177/14649934231197277).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Indonesia, like many rapidly ageing lower-middle-income countries (LMICs), tends to portray older citizens as ‘vulnerable’ and ‘dependent’; yet the country has few public policies to support them. To this discourse, an alternative stereotype is emerging, influenced by notions of ‘successful ageing’, which promotes models of older people as healthy and contributing to families and the nation state. In this article, we argue that both stereotypes ignore the varied and context-specific conditions of later life. Importantly, the dominant representations ignore the frailty and dependence that many people in LMICs experience towards the end of their lives. This results in dependence and frailty being concealed from view and treated as a purely familial responsibility, which households living in economic, social and demographic precarity can ill afford. ‘Familism by default’ spells invisible, unsupported and unsustainable care for many older Indonesians. This article draws on ethnographic fieldwork between 2018 and 2022 from two research projects on ageing, livelihoods, vulnerability and care in disparate communities across Indonesia. By juxtaposing dominant representations with the social, economic and health realities in which lives are lived, we trace the implications for policies, values and practices around care in later life.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 June 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 October 2023
Published date: 4 October 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: We acknowledge the generous funding from the Australian Research Council (Discovery Grant DP170101044) for the project Understanding Social, Economic and Health Vulnerabilities Across the Lifecourse in Indonesia (2016–2021) and from the Economic and Social Research Council (ES/S013407/1) for the project Care Networks in Later Life (2019–2023), on which this article is based. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 SAGE Publications.
Venue - Dates: Development Studies Association Annual Conference: Unsettling Development, University of East Anglia (online), Norwich, United Kingdom, 2021-06-28 - 2021-07-02
Keywords: Ageing, care, dependence, frailty, Indonesia, vulnerability

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479024
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479024
ISSN: 1464-9934
PURE UUID: 1342fc2b-2377-4ca5-b003-2a6eb723e4ab
ORCID for Elisabeth Schröder-Butterfill: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5071-8710

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 18 Jul 2023 16:51
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:05

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Contributors

Author: Nathan Porath
Author: Yvonne Suzy Handajani
Author: Ciptaningrat Larastiti
Author: Benidiktus Delpada
Author: Eef Hogervorst
Author: Hezti Insriani
Author: Jelly
Author: Philip Kreager
Author: Dyah Rahayuningtyas
Author: Florencia Yuniferti Sare
Author: Tresno

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