A Place for Us? Baby Boomers, Their Elders, and the Public Library

Canada’s aging population is expected to have an impact on all public institutions; for public libraries, the emergence of a large, multi-generational user group of older adults challenges the current paradigm of services to seniors. This thesis examines a subset of this user group: baby boomer lib...

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Main Author: Robbins, Wendy L.
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20506
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.-en#10393-205062013-01-11T13:33:12ZA Place for Us? Baby Boomers, Their Elders, and the Public LibraryRobbins, Wendy L.adult servicesaging populationbaby boomerdemographic changeeldersethic of carelibrary as placepublic librariesseniorsCanada’s aging population is expected to have an impact on all public institutions; for public libraries, the emergence of a large, multi-generational user group of older adults challenges the current paradigm of services to seniors. This thesis examines a subset of this user group: baby boomer library patrons who are in a caring relationship with elders. It investigates how these patrons interact with the public library both for themselves, and as carers, in order to reveal library-related issues particular to this growing segment of the population. The study takes place within a conceptual framework derived from the ethic of care, and from emerging theories of library-as-place rooted in the fields of human geography and sociology. Using a qualitative instrumental case study method, long form interviews were conducted with respondents recruited through theoretical sampling extended by snowball sampling. While not generalizable, findings suggest that while these baby boomer respondents value their libraries deeply, there is potential to create services and practices more attuned to the needs of older adults who are in relationships with elders.2012-01-05T20:57:25Z2012-01-05T20:57:25Z20122012-01-05http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20506en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic adult services
aging population
baby boomer
demographic change
elders
ethic of care
library as place
public libraries
seniors
spellingShingle adult services
aging population
baby boomer
demographic change
elders
ethic of care
library as place
public libraries
seniors
Robbins, Wendy L.
A Place for Us? Baby Boomers, Their Elders, and the Public Library
description Canada’s aging population is expected to have an impact on all public institutions; for public libraries, the emergence of a large, multi-generational user group of older adults challenges the current paradigm of services to seniors. This thesis examines a subset of this user group: baby boomer library patrons who are in a caring relationship with elders. It investigates how these patrons interact with the public library both for themselves, and as carers, in order to reveal library-related issues particular to this growing segment of the population. The study takes place within a conceptual framework derived from the ethic of care, and from emerging theories of library-as-place rooted in the fields of human geography and sociology. Using a qualitative instrumental case study method, long form interviews were conducted with respondents recruited through theoretical sampling extended by snowball sampling. While not generalizable, findings suggest that while these baby boomer respondents value their libraries deeply, there is potential to create services and practices more attuned to the needs of older adults who are in relationships with elders.
author Robbins, Wendy L.
author_facet Robbins, Wendy L.
author_sort Robbins, Wendy L.
title A Place for Us? Baby Boomers, Their Elders, and the Public Library
title_short A Place for Us? Baby Boomers, Their Elders, and the Public Library
title_full A Place for Us? Baby Boomers, Their Elders, and the Public Library
title_fullStr A Place for Us? Baby Boomers, Their Elders, and the Public Library
title_full_unstemmed A Place for Us? Baby Boomers, Their Elders, and the Public Library
title_sort place for us? baby boomers, their elders, and the public library
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20506
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