An Analysis of the Factors That Influence Older African-Americans to Self-Define as Retired

<p>Research that examines gender and retirement has given us insights on the ways in which gender structures the work and retirement experience primarily for white men and women. At the same time, a small but growing body of research on race-ethnicity and retirement reveals that race-ethnicit...

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Main Author: Jackson, Tanara
Other Authors: Sociology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/42186
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-042399-122534/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-421862020-09-29T05:47:50Z An Analysis of the Factors That Influence Older African-Americans to Self-Define as Retired Jackson, Tanara Sociology Calasanti, Toni M. Hughes, Michael D. Bayer, Alan E. aging <p>Research that examines gender and retirement has given us insights on the ways in which gender structures the work and retirement experience primarily for white men and women. At the same time, a small but growing body of research on race-ethnicity and retirement reveals that race-ethnicity also serves as a context that structures the work and retirement experience. However, research that examines the intersections of race-ethnicity and gender in relation to retirement is almost non-existent. Our subsequent knowledge of how race-ethnicity and gender serve as contexts defining the retirement experience is severely limited. One result is that it is difficult to make generalizations or draw reliable conclusions concerning non-dominant populations. To address this gap, I conducted an exploratory investigation on the general topic of race, gender, and retirement, specifically focusing on how the process of self-definition as retired occurs among African-American men and women.<p> <p>Using data from Wave I of the Americansâ Changing Lives Survey, this investigation identified the gender-and class-specific paid and unpaid productive activities that African-Americans ages fifty-five and older perform. Since unpaid activities are gender-specific, examining them, along with measures of income, income sources, education, marital status, age, and disabled status would help reveal the extent to which gender interacts with race-ethnicity to structure self-definition for Black men and women.<p> <p>These findings suggest that for older African-Americans, gender significantly impacts the decision to self-define as retired. However, when considering the impact of gender-specific unpaid productive activities, the above finding is not true. It is only in relation to the receipt of Social Security income, disabled status, and work status that gender significantly interacts with race-ethnicity to structure the decision to self-define as retired. In general, these findings substantiate pre-existing research on race, gender, and retirement. Importantly, they prompt further development of scholarly literature in this area of research, as this body of literature is still largely underexplored and inconclusive.<p> Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:34:19Z 2014-03-14T21:34:19Z 1999-04-14 1999-04-23 2000-04-27 1999-04-27 Thesis etd-042399-122534 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/42186 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-042399-122534/ brooke.PDF tanny.PDF In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
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topic aging
spellingShingle aging
Jackson, Tanara
An Analysis of the Factors That Influence Older African-Americans to Self-Define as Retired
description <p>Research that examines gender and retirement has given us insights on the ways in which gender structures the work and retirement experience primarily for white men and women. At the same time, a small but growing body of research on race-ethnicity and retirement reveals that race-ethnicity also serves as a context that structures the work and retirement experience. However, research that examines the intersections of race-ethnicity and gender in relation to retirement is almost non-existent. Our subsequent knowledge of how race-ethnicity and gender serve as contexts defining the retirement experience is severely limited. One result is that it is difficult to make generalizations or draw reliable conclusions concerning non-dominant populations. To address this gap, I conducted an exploratory investigation on the general topic of race, gender, and retirement, specifically focusing on how the process of self-definition as retired occurs among African-American men and women.<p> <p>Using data from Wave I of the Americansâ Changing Lives Survey, this investigation identified the gender-and class-specific paid and unpaid productive activities that African-Americans ages fifty-five and older perform. Since unpaid activities are gender-specific, examining them, along with measures of income, income sources, education, marital status, age, and disabled status would help reveal the extent to which gender interacts with race-ethnicity to structure self-definition for Black men and women.<p> <p>These findings suggest that for older African-Americans, gender significantly impacts the decision to self-define as retired. However, when considering the impact of gender-specific unpaid productive activities, the above finding is not true. It is only in relation to the receipt of Social Security income, disabled status, and work status that gender significantly interacts with race-ethnicity to structure the decision to self-define as retired. In general, these findings substantiate pre-existing research on race, gender, and retirement. Importantly, they prompt further development of scholarly literature in this area of research, as this body of literature is still largely underexplored and inconclusive.<p> === Master of Science
author2 Sociology
author_facet Sociology
Jackson, Tanara
author Jackson, Tanara
author_sort Jackson, Tanara
title An Analysis of the Factors That Influence Older African-Americans to Self-Define as Retired
title_short An Analysis of the Factors That Influence Older African-Americans to Self-Define as Retired
title_full An Analysis of the Factors That Influence Older African-Americans to Self-Define as Retired
title_fullStr An Analysis of the Factors That Influence Older African-Americans to Self-Define as Retired
title_full_unstemmed An Analysis of the Factors That Influence Older African-Americans to Self-Define as Retired
title_sort analysis of the factors that influence older african-americans to self-define as retired
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/42186
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-042399-122534/
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