Intergenerational Contact Zones: Place-based Strategies for Promoting Social Inclusion and Belonging
Editat de Matthew Kaplan, Leng Leng Thang, Mariano Sánchez, Jaco Hoffmanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 mar 2020
The ICZ concept embraces generation and regeneration of community life, parks and recreational locations, educational environments, residential settings and family life, and national and international contexts for social development. With its focus on creating effective and meaningful intergenerational settings, it offers a rich how-to toolkit to help professionals and user groups as they begin to consider ways to develop, activate, and nurture intergenerational spaces.
Intergenerational Contact Zones will be essential reading for academics and researchers interested in human development, aging, and society, as well as practitioners, educators, and policy makers interested in intergenerational gathering places from an international perspective.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780367189020
ISBN-10: 036718902X
Pagini: 350
Ilustrații: 81
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 036718902X
Pagini: 350
Ilustrații: 81
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Introduction
Part I. Generation/Regeneration of Community Life
Chapter 1. Culture as Animator of Intergenerational Gathering Places
Robert H. McNulty
Chapter 2. Our Community, Our Traditional Food: Around the Fire as an Intergenerational Contact Zone
Shingaira Chigeza, Nicole Claasen and Vera Roos
Chapter 3. Finding Fertile Ground in Libraries for Intergenerational Dance
Yvonne Ng
Chapter 4. Transforming a barn into an ‘intergenerational planning zone"
Matthew Kaplan, Suzanna Windon, and Evan Zavada
Chapter 5. City Cycling Spaces for Welcoming and Engaging All Ages
Tim Jones and Ben Spencer
Chapter 6. Playful Perspectives and Everyday Spaces: Imagining a Bus Stop as an Intergenerational Contact Zone
Jason Danely
Part II. Parks and Recreation
Chapter 7. Connecting generations in Chinese urban parks
Patricia O’Neill
Chapter 8. Urban Public Parks: Magnets for Social Inclusion and Engagement across Generations
Cláudia Azevedo
Chapter 9. Intergenerational Gardening on Urban Rooftops: The Example of the "Play and Grow" Program in Hong Kong
Tanja Sobko and Louise Chawla
Chapter 10. Forests as Intergenerational Contact Zones: Teaching About and Experiencing Forests Through Historical Interpretation
Sanford S. Smith and Matthew S. Kaplan
Chapter 11. Sowing Connections in a Community Garden: An Intergenerational Partnership between Young Adult Cancer Survivors and Master Gardeners
Renate M. Winkels, Rick Artrip, Maegan Tupinio and Daniel R. George
Part III. Education Settings
Chapter 12. Schools as Intergenerational Contact Zones: The Cleveland Case
Catherine Whitehouse, Peter Whitehouse, & Mariano Sánchez
Chapter 13. College Classrooms as Intergenerational Contact Zones
Joann M. Montepare and Mark Sciegaj
Chapter 14. Adding Excitement and Relevance to Second Language Learning: Imagining a School-based English Language Center as an Intergenerational Contact Zone
Alan Lai
Part IV. Residential Settings and Family Life
Chapter 15. Intergenerational Living in Cohousing Communities
Lisia Zheng
Chapter 16. Cocktails in Care Homes: An intergenerational strategy for bridging the care home – community divide
Phoebe Grudzinskas and Susan Langford
Chapter 17. Senior Housing as a Community Hub for Intergenerational Interaction
Nancy Henkin and Taryn Patterson
Chapter 18. The Japanese teapot: Objects at home that possess Intergenerational Contact Zone generating properties
Yoshika Yamamoto and Leng Leng Thang
Chapter 19. The Virtual Environment as Intergenerational Contact Zone: Play through Digital Gaming
Eyu Zang
Part V. Social Development: National/International Contexts
Chapter 20. Multigenerational Cyclical Support System: Programs in Japan for "Designing a Sustainable Society through Intergenerational Co-creation."
Masataka Kuraoka
Chapter 21. Exploring Design Principles and Strategies for Intergenerational Places in Australia: Revealing Opportunities and Potential in Beach and Public Pool Settings.
Kah Mun Tham, Diane Jones and Ann Quinlan; Architect
Chapter 22. Intergenerational Contact Zones in Contested Places and Spaces: The Olive Tree as Entity and Symbol
Suzanne Hammad
Part VI. Methods
Chapter 23. A Toolkit for Intergenerational Contact Zones Application
Mariano Sánchez and Philip B. Stafford
Chapter 24. Intergenerational programs and intergenerational contact zones: Aligning notions of ‘good quality’
Mariano Sánchez, Pilar Díaz, Andrés Rodríguez and Rosa Bonachela
Chapter 25. Everyone Can Make a Map: Multigenerational and Intergenerational Explorations of Community
Philip B. Stafford
Conclusion
Part I. Generation/Regeneration of Community Life
Chapter 1. Culture as Animator of Intergenerational Gathering Places
Robert H. McNulty
Chapter 2. Our Community, Our Traditional Food: Around the Fire as an Intergenerational Contact Zone
Shingaira Chigeza, Nicole Claasen and Vera Roos
Chapter 3. Finding Fertile Ground in Libraries for Intergenerational Dance
Yvonne Ng
Chapter 4. Transforming a barn into an ‘intergenerational planning zone"
Matthew Kaplan, Suzanna Windon, and Evan Zavada
Chapter 5. City Cycling Spaces for Welcoming and Engaging All Ages
Tim Jones and Ben Spencer
Chapter 6. Playful Perspectives and Everyday Spaces: Imagining a Bus Stop as an Intergenerational Contact Zone
Jason Danely
Part II. Parks and Recreation
Chapter 7. Connecting generations in Chinese urban parks
Patricia O’Neill
Chapter 8. Urban Public Parks: Magnets for Social Inclusion and Engagement across Generations
Cláudia Azevedo
Chapter 9. Intergenerational Gardening on Urban Rooftops: The Example of the "Play and Grow" Program in Hong Kong
Tanja Sobko and Louise Chawla
Chapter 10. Forests as Intergenerational Contact Zones: Teaching About and Experiencing Forests Through Historical Interpretation
Sanford S. Smith and Matthew S. Kaplan
Chapter 11. Sowing Connections in a Community Garden: An Intergenerational Partnership between Young Adult Cancer Survivors and Master Gardeners
Renate M. Winkels, Rick Artrip, Maegan Tupinio and Daniel R. George
Part III. Education Settings
Chapter 12. Schools as Intergenerational Contact Zones: The Cleveland Case
Catherine Whitehouse, Peter Whitehouse, & Mariano Sánchez
Chapter 13. College Classrooms as Intergenerational Contact Zones
Joann M. Montepare and Mark Sciegaj
Chapter 14. Adding Excitement and Relevance to Second Language Learning: Imagining a School-based English Language Center as an Intergenerational Contact Zone
Alan Lai
Part IV. Residential Settings and Family Life
Chapter 15. Intergenerational Living in Cohousing Communities
Lisia Zheng
Chapter 16. Cocktails in Care Homes: An intergenerational strategy for bridging the care home – community divide
Phoebe Grudzinskas and Susan Langford
Chapter 17. Senior Housing as a Community Hub for Intergenerational Interaction
Nancy Henkin and Taryn Patterson
Chapter 18. The Japanese teapot: Objects at home that possess Intergenerational Contact Zone generating properties
Yoshika Yamamoto and Leng Leng Thang
Chapter 19. The Virtual Environment as Intergenerational Contact Zone: Play through Digital Gaming
Eyu Zang
Part V. Social Development: National/International Contexts
Chapter 20. Multigenerational Cyclical Support System: Programs in Japan for "Designing a Sustainable Society through Intergenerational Co-creation."
Masataka Kuraoka
Chapter 21. Exploring Design Principles and Strategies for Intergenerational Places in Australia: Revealing Opportunities and Potential in Beach and Public Pool Settings.
Kah Mun Tham, Diane Jones and Ann Quinlan; Architect
Chapter 22. Intergenerational Contact Zones in Contested Places and Spaces: The Olive Tree as Entity and Symbol
Suzanne Hammad
Part VI. Methods
Chapter 23. A Toolkit for Intergenerational Contact Zones Application
Mariano Sánchez and Philip B. Stafford
Chapter 24. Intergenerational programs and intergenerational contact zones: Aligning notions of ‘good quality’
Mariano Sánchez, Pilar Díaz, Andrés Rodríguez and Rosa Bonachela
Chapter 25. Everyone Can Make a Map: Multigenerational and Intergenerational Explorations of Community
Philip B. Stafford
Conclusion
Notă biografică
Dr. Matthew Kaplan is Professor of Intergenerational Programs and Aging in the Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology, and Education at Pennsylvania State University. He is an affiliate member of the Penn State Center for Healthy Aging and core faculty member of the Comparative and International Education (CIED) Dual-Title Graduate Degree Program.
Dr. Leng Leng Thang is Associate Professor and Head of Department of Japanese Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore. She is also is co-director of the Next Age Institute.
Dr. Mariano Sánchez is Associate Professor of Sociology and inaugural head of the Macrosad Chair in Intergenerational Studies at the University of Granada in Spain. Professor Sánchez is as well International Affiliate at the Center for Healthy Aging (Pennsylvania State University), and director of the Intergenerational Spaces Lab.
Dr. Jaco Hoffman, DPhil (Oxon), is socio-gerontologist and leader of the Optentia Research Focus programme: Ageing and Generational Dynamics in Africa (AGenDA) at North-West University, South Africa as well as James Martin Senior Research Fellow in the Oxford Institute of Population Ageing at the University of Oxford, UK.
Dr. Leng Leng Thang is Associate Professor and Head of Department of Japanese Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore. She is also is co-director of the Next Age Institute.
Dr. Mariano Sánchez is Associate Professor of Sociology and inaugural head of the Macrosad Chair in Intergenerational Studies at the University of Granada in Spain. Professor Sánchez is as well International Affiliate at the Center for Healthy Aging (Pennsylvania State University), and director of the Intergenerational Spaces Lab.
Dr. Jaco Hoffman, DPhil (Oxon), is socio-gerontologist and leader of the Optentia Research Focus programme: Ageing and Generational Dynamics in Africa (AGenDA) at North-West University, South Africa as well as James Martin Senior Research Fellow in the Oxford Institute of Population Ageing at the University of Oxford, UK.
Recenzii
"The case studies of ICZs provoke much needed information-sharing and mutual learning for practitioners, community-builders, policymakers, planners, designers, and researchers across boundaries and borders. It is a timely and generative read, offering tangible insights for various audiences currently imagining and building those intergenerational communities and societies many of us desperately want and need…I urge practitioners and academics from these disciplines to read this book and contribute to core learnings on the physical, political, and institutional components of the ICZ framework." – Book Review by Meghan Joy, Concordia University, in Anthropology and Aging, Journal of the Association for Aging and Gerontology, Vol 41, No 1 (2021)
Descriere
Intergenerational Contact Zones is the first book to explore the foundations and applications of intergenerational contact zones (ICZs) from an international perspective. This important volume focuses on practical descriptions and developments to nurture practitioners’ and researchers’ capacity to translate ICZs into their work.