Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1081974 Journal of Aging Studies 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The importance of hearing older people's voices within local governance processes is well recognised; however, the increasing diversity among older people makes this complex. Questions around inclusion and exclusion, representation and representativeness create challenges for the ways in which diverse older people are engaged. This paper uses the results from a qualitative study conducted in Australia to address the key research question: how does diversity impact on older people's perceptions and experiences of barriers to participation in local governance? Results indicate that diversity impacts not simply on what barriers are reported by seniors, but on how those barriers are experienced. Patterns among the barriers reported and their relationship with diversity reflect questions around representation and inclusion. Thus despite broad acceptance of the notion that understanding diversity is integral to inclusion, challenges remain for older people's engagement with local governance processes. A deeper understanding of diversity and how it relates to inclusion are required.

► Australian study explores barriers to seniors' participation in local governance. ► Diversity impacts on what barriers to participation are reported by seniors. ► Diversity also impacts on how barriers are experienced. ► Patterns among the barriers relating to diversity reflect challenges to inclusion.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Geriatrics and Gerontology
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