The Elderly and Development : A field study on elderly people’s livelihoods
This report presents findings from research in Ribáuè district, Nampula province, in northeast Mozambique. Our aim was to understand the living conditions of the impoverished elderly and identify strategies that may improve their situation. We conducted semi-structured interviews with elderly people...
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Växjö universitet, Institutionen för samhällsvetenskap
2007
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ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-vxu-18812018-01-14T05:10:10ZThe Elderly and Development : A field study on elderly people’s livelihoodsengBernerson, MalinMortlock, CarolineVäxjö universitet, Institutionen för samhällsvetenskapVäxjö universitet, Institutionen för samhällsvetenskap2007Mozambiquefood subsidy programSRLSocial Sciences InterdisciplinaryTvärvetenskapliga studier inom samhällsvetenskapThis report presents findings from research in Ribáuè district, Nampula province, in northeast Mozambique. Our aim was to understand the living conditions of the impoverished elderly and identify strategies that may improve their situation. We conducted semi-structured interviews with elderly people, including some of the most vulnerable and some who receive income from the social assistance programme. To gain a wider context we met representatives of governmental and non-governmental organisations and referred to secondary sources. We use the Sustainable Rural Livelihoods framework to present the capital assets (natural,social, financial, physical and human) of Ribáuè district and of its elderly inhabitants. We consider how access to assets is affected by political, economic and cultural factors in the community. We set the situation of the elderly against the development history of postindependence Mozambique, and international concern about poverty, the ageing population and their human rights. We find that social assets in the form of human relationships, and natural assets in the form of land, are essential for elderly people’s livelihoods. Most of the elderly have very limited access to financial assets, apart from the few who receive social ssistance. This programme makes a very small but appreciated contribution to family welfare. However the programme’s reach has been limited geographically and eligibility regulations tend to obstruct access for the very poorest. In general the human capital of the rural and uneducated elderly is declining, as society increasingly values modern skills and knowledge. However the Ribáuè residents we met experience some benefit from infrastructure modernisation. Elderly people are receiving more attention, especially as carers of children. We have identified existing strategies for improving elderly people’s livelihoods. We suggest ways to build on these, as well as possible new strategies. If development policies are both equitable and successful, increased employment and taxation should enable formal pension and social security systems to provide for the elderly in the long-term future. In the short to medium term, expansion of the social assistance programme must be prioritised, as it is vital to the most vulnerable. It is also important that people’s customary engagement in mutually supportive social networks is strengthened rather than undermined by development changes. Key words: Mozambique, Nampula, elderly, social assistance, the food subsidy program (PSA), Sustainable Rural Livelihoods (SRL) Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:vxu:diva-1881Rapportserie : Institutionen för samhällsvetenskap, Växjö universitet, ; application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
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language |
English |
format |
Others
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sources |
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Mozambique food subsidy program SRL Social Sciences Interdisciplinary Tvärvetenskapliga studier inom samhällsvetenskap |
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Mozambique food subsidy program SRL Social Sciences Interdisciplinary Tvärvetenskapliga studier inom samhällsvetenskap Bernerson, Malin Mortlock, Caroline The Elderly and Development : A field study on elderly people’s livelihoods |
description |
This report presents findings from research in Ribáuè district, Nampula province, in northeast Mozambique. Our aim was to understand the living conditions of the impoverished elderly and identify strategies that may improve their situation. We conducted semi-structured interviews with elderly people, including some of the most vulnerable and some who receive income from the social assistance programme. To gain a wider context we met representatives of governmental and non-governmental organisations and referred to secondary sources. We use the Sustainable Rural Livelihoods framework to present the capital assets (natural,social, financial, physical and human) of Ribáuè district and of its elderly inhabitants. We consider how access to assets is affected by political, economic and cultural factors in the community. We set the situation of the elderly against the development history of postindependence Mozambique, and international concern about poverty, the ageing population and their human rights. We find that social assets in the form of human relationships, and natural assets in the form of land, are essential for elderly people’s livelihoods. Most of the elderly have very limited access to financial assets, apart from the few who receive social ssistance. This programme makes a very small but appreciated contribution to family welfare. However the programme’s reach has been limited geographically and eligibility regulations tend to obstruct access for the very poorest. In general the human capital of the rural and uneducated elderly is declining, as society increasingly values modern skills and knowledge. However the Ribáuè residents we met experience some benefit from infrastructure modernisation. Elderly people are receiving more attention, especially as carers of children. We have identified existing strategies for improving elderly people’s livelihoods. We suggest ways to build on these, as well as possible new strategies. If development policies are both equitable and successful, increased employment and taxation should enable formal pension and social security systems to provide for the elderly in the long-term future. In the short to medium term, expansion of the social assistance programme must be prioritised, as it is vital to the most vulnerable. It is also important that people’s customary engagement in mutually supportive social networks is strengthened rather than undermined by development changes. Key words: Mozambique, Nampula, elderly, social assistance, the food subsidy program (PSA), Sustainable Rural Livelihoods (SRL) |
author |
Bernerson, Malin Mortlock, Caroline |
author_facet |
Bernerson, Malin Mortlock, Caroline |
author_sort |
Bernerson, Malin |
title |
The Elderly and Development : A field study on elderly people’s livelihoods |
title_short |
The Elderly and Development : A field study on elderly people’s livelihoods |
title_full |
The Elderly and Development : A field study on elderly people’s livelihoods |
title_fullStr |
The Elderly and Development : A field study on elderly people’s livelihoods |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Elderly and Development : A field study on elderly people’s livelihoods |
title_sort |
elderly and development : a field study on elderly people’s livelihoods |
publisher |
Växjö universitet, Institutionen för samhällsvetenskap |
publishDate |
2007 |
url |
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:vxu:diva-1881 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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_version_ |
1718609513608642560 |