Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Aging Trajectories of women in modern Russia. / Grigoryeva, Irina; Sizova, Irina.
In: Mir Rossii, Vol. 27, No. 2, 01.01.2018, p. 109-135.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Aging Trajectories of women in modern Russia
AU - Grigoryeva, Irina
AU - Sizova, Irina
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - This article studies the trajectories of aging among women in modern Russia, and how these trajectories transform in the context of increasing longevity, decreasing pensions and increasing uncertainty about the future. In the first part of the article, the authors analyze the concept of aging and how the role of older generations in society is understood according to foreign and Russian studies. The authors conclude that the role and potential of older generations in society needs rethinking, which is a challenge both to social science and social security. The prevention of ageism, i.e., discrimination based on age at the institutional level and in the public discourse, requires a radical shift in the aging paradigm, the involvement of elderly in all aspects of life, and assistance to the elderly in shaping their life strategies in the context of complex and multiple choices. The second part of the article discusses the phenomenon of feminization in old age. This leads to a highly nuanced vision of the changes in the current models of social stratification and inequality, revealing the particularity of the "worlds" of aging. An especially troubling situation is characteristic of Russia, where the proportion of older women is growing, and their social isolation is maintained at several levels: in the employment system, in the family sphere, in self-organization and in the subjective perception of their lives. The problems that women experience at different stages of their life cycle are exacerbated in their old age. Based on these theoretical premises, the authors conduct an empirical study of basic aging patterns among Russian women aged 50 and above. Using Russian Longitudinal Monitoring Survey of HSE (waves 2009, 2011, 2015) they investigate these women's situations with employment, self-identification, and their forms of activity. The findings reveal that the main changes in the life of Russian women occur after age 60. After 60 they rapidly lose their partners, and change their status from "employed" to "retired" which negatively affects their lifestyles and self-realization. Their activity outside of employment also drops substantially after this age. The diversity and intensity of these activities vary by several interconnected aspects: the age of a woman, her involvement in professional activities, her marital status, wealth and health.
AB - This article studies the trajectories of aging among women in modern Russia, and how these trajectories transform in the context of increasing longevity, decreasing pensions and increasing uncertainty about the future. In the first part of the article, the authors analyze the concept of aging and how the role of older generations in society is understood according to foreign and Russian studies. The authors conclude that the role and potential of older generations in society needs rethinking, which is a challenge both to social science and social security. The prevention of ageism, i.e., discrimination based on age at the institutional level and in the public discourse, requires a radical shift in the aging paradigm, the involvement of elderly in all aspects of life, and assistance to the elderly in shaping their life strategies in the context of complex and multiple choices. The second part of the article discusses the phenomenon of feminization in old age. This leads to a highly nuanced vision of the changes in the current models of social stratification and inequality, revealing the particularity of the "worlds" of aging. An especially troubling situation is characteristic of Russia, where the proportion of older women is growing, and their social isolation is maintained at several levels: in the employment system, in the family sphere, in self-organization and in the subjective perception of their lives. The problems that women experience at different stages of their life cycle are exacerbated in their old age. Based on these theoretical premises, the authors conduct an empirical study of basic aging patterns among Russian women aged 50 and above. Using Russian Longitudinal Monitoring Survey of HSE (waves 2009, 2011, 2015) they investigate these women's situations with employment, self-identification, and their forms of activity. The findings reveal that the main changes in the life of Russian women occur after age 60. After 60 they rapidly lose their partners, and change their status from "employed" to "retired" which negatively affects their lifestyles and self-realization. Their activity outside of employment also drops substantially after this age. The diversity and intensity of these activities vary by several interconnected aspects: the age of a woman, her involvement in professional activities, her marital status, wealth and health.
KW - Forms of activity
KW - Lifestyle
KW - Older generations
KW - The feminization of old age
KW - The identity
KW - The path of woman aging
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85045429390&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.17323/1811-038X-2018-27-2-109-135
DO - 10.17323/1811-038X-2018-27-2-109-135
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85045429390
VL - 27
SP - 109
EP - 135
JO - МИР РОССИИ: СОЦИОЛОГИЯ, ЭТНОЛОГИЯ
JF - МИР РОССИИ: СОЦИОЛОГИЯ, ЭТНОЛОГИЯ
SN - 1811-038X
IS - 2
ER -
ID: 36735585