Summary information

Study title

Study «Vivre/Leben/Vivere» on the living conditions of elderly people in Switzerland, 2011.

Creator

Oris, Michel
Cavalli, Stefano
Ludwig, Catherine
Bickel, Jean-François
Bolzman, Claudio
Canuto, Alessandra
Joye, Dominique
Luthy, Christophe
Spini, Dario
Widmer, Eric
Perrig-Chiello, Pasqualina

Study number / PID

92ff4513-e8b9-4ff5-8cc0-50c674bfa736 (SWISSUbase)

10.23662/FORS-DS-1234-1 (DOI)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

This project proposes to investigate the living conditions of the aged population in Switzerland and to address the diversity of these conditions using an interdisciplinary approach. The study will rely on a survey that will be conducted in 2011 in two French-speaking, two German-speaking areas, and Ticino. Rooted in a common theoretical model, shared concepts, and common objectives, together, we aim to solve the tension between continuity (comparison of our findings with studies conducted in 1979 and 1994) and innovation (better tools, new issues, and a more national representation). In the past century, industrialized countries - among which Switzerland - have witnessed a drastic increase of life expectancy, and a decrease in the prevalence of dependency decreased among the elderly. While a substantial number of positive changes occurred, nothing ensures that similar trends are persisting. Indeed, new generations carrying their own their specificities will soon reach the age of retirement and old age. Further, the characteristics of the aged population in 2011 cannot be satisfactorily predicted on the basis of previous data since the structure of the aged population has drastically changed over the last decades. The massive aging reported in the immigrant population in Switzerland constitutes a clear example of such a compositional change. Provided these various transformations, the proposed project intends to address two major issues simultaneously: heterogeneity among the elderly, i.e., diversity and inequalities, and sustainability of the previous positive trends in terms of social participation, health, and longevity. Our theoretical approach will be centered on the concept of resources, as conceived in the lifespan psychology and the life course theory. Globally, our research design considers how resources are built through individual lives embedded in family trajectories and socioeconomic, cultural, and political contexts. Thus, we will first estimate how...
Read more

Keywords

Not available

Methodology

Data collection period

Not available

Country

Bâle-Ville, Valais, French-speaking part, Geneva, German-speaking part, Berne, Western Europe, Ticino, Europe, Switzerland, Italian-speaking part

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Not available

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Not available

Access

Publisher

FORS

Publication year

2021

Terms of data access

Additional Restrictions: None
Special permission: None

Related publications

Not available