To read this content please select one of the options below:

The crisis of Neoliberal project of aging during the COVID-19 pandemic: from compulsory activity to mandatory isolation

Elena Bogdanova (Department of Sociology, European University at Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation; Centre for Independent Social Research, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation and Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration, Saint-Petersburg, Russian Federation)
Irina Grigoryeva (Department of Sociology, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation and Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation)

The Journal of Adult Protection

ISSN: 1466-8203

Article publication date: 14 December 2020

Issue publication date: 24 May 2021

591

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to consider how the situation of the COVID-19 pandemic questions the neoliberal project of ageing, based on a notion of a healthy, active, working older person. A long-term struggle to include older people has been (temporarily) replaced with a struggle to exclude them. This seems to be one of the most sensitive sore spots of the coronavirus crisis and one of the most serious challenges to social policy and welfare systems the world over. The purpose of this paper is to consider where the concepts of ageing and the action on ageing were at right before the crisis and what their further development may look like.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper provides a critical overview of main conceptions based on the neoliberal project of ageing.

Findings

The main principle of the neoliberal project of ageing, which had been formed on the crossroad of social theory and policy through decades, became vulnerable in the face of COVID-19 pandemic. The new forced ageing reveals its repressive nature through ensuring seniors’ safety from exposure, their removal from work and isolation. The theory now faces new challenges of meshing a neoliberal actor – active, independent and productive – with an older person in isolation, who needs safeguarding, of re-conceptualizing social exclusion of seniors in a situation where exclusion is equated with safety, of resolving a dilemma between isolation and respect of human rights and of keeping progress in anti-ageism.

Research limitations/implications

This paper presents an overview of the main conceptions, underlying the neoliberal project of ageing. It aims to designate the vulnerabilities of the project, which were revealed under the situation of pandemic. Further development of the discussion needs detailed analysis of theoretical conceptions of ageing.

Practical implications

Theoretical debate reflects policy of ageing. Discussion of theoretical problems of ageism, social exclusion, safeguarding of the elderly and compulsion are necessary for improvement of social policy of ageing.

Social implications

When the neoliberal project of ageing comes into collision with the reality with the reality, the authors recognize it as a crisis. It moves the society, and especially the elderly, to the situation of uncertainty. This paper calls for discussion and search for a new balance among the generations in a society.

Originality/value

This paper relies upon the current debate on neoliberal project of ageing and responds immediately to the situation of pandemic. Now conceptual problems in theories of ageing and policy projects became visible, and the authors suppose it is time to initiate this discussion.

Keywords

Citation

Bogdanova, E. and Grigoryeva, I. (2021), "The crisis of Neoliberal project of aging during the COVID-19 pandemic: from compulsory activity to mandatory isolation", The Journal of Adult Protection, Vol. 23 No. 2, pp. 76-85. https://doi.org/10.1108/JAP-08-2020-0038

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles