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Elder Abuse
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Criminological concerns with the victimization of the elderly has developed parallel to, and independently of, the elder abuse debate. Criminologists have traditionally been concerned with the commission of acts against the older person in public as opposed to private space. A further hindrance to criminological enquiry is the practice of defining elder abuse in terms of victim needs, rather than of basic human rights. There has been no neat evolutionary process from positive treatment of the elderly, attributed to some golden age in the past to their increasing present victimization rates globally. Elder victimization is a long way from the simplistic notions of “granny battering.” There is general agreement among scholars that older people regularly suffer victimization in private space—in the household and in care institutions. They regularly experience multiple forms of abuse. One can attribute some of these experiences to major social changes as declining family support for older people diminishes and the proportion of young to old decreases. The World Health Organization (WHO) states that as the global population ages, the number of people aged sixty years and older is estimated to reach 1.2 billion worldwide by 2025. More pointedly, the longevity is also inextricably linked to the maltreatment of the global old. In particular, we have seen offenders apprehended in transgressions against the young, women, and ethnic minorities but have yet to see an active criminal justice response concerned with the experience of elder victimization. The discipline’s reluctance to recognize elder victimization is associated with it commonly being labeled as victimization by intimates, and to be understood through the lenses of psychology and psychiatry rather than through a criminal justice model. Care and individual needs of the elderly have been the traditional focus, rather than social justice, reason, and rights. Justice and rights involve choice and free will. Older people are not simply passive recipients of other people’s actions—they resist their victimization and often fight back. This article is a critical exposition of the sources available on elders abused as part of a larger account of the experience of older people worldwide. In particular, the reader is reminded that this article is limited due to publishing word constraints. Therefore, it provides a balanced, limited overview of the major literature and research available in the Western context. More pointedly, the literature cited here is intended to reflect on recent scholarship considered to have the potential of adding to the debate in criminology and elder victimization. Given that the study of elder abuse is still in its infancy in the discipline of criminology, this article is therefore necessarily interdisciplinary.
Title: Elder Abuse
Description:
Criminological concerns with the victimization of the elderly has developed parallel to, and independently of, the elder abuse debate.
Criminologists have traditionally been concerned with the commission of acts against the older person in public as opposed to private space.
A further hindrance to criminological enquiry is the practice of defining elder abuse in terms of victim needs, rather than of basic human rights.
There has been no neat evolutionary process from positive treatment of the elderly, attributed to some golden age in the past to their increasing present victimization rates globally.
Elder victimization is a long way from the simplistic notions of “granny battering.
” There is general agreement among scholars that older people regularly suffer victimization in private space—in the household and in care institutions.
They regularly experience multiple forms of abuse.
One can attribute some of these experiences to major social changes as declining family support for older people diminishes and the proportion of young to old decreases.
The World Health Organization (WHO) states that as the global population ages, the number of people aged sixty years and older is estimated to reach 1.
2 billion worldwide by 2025.
More pointedly, the longevity is also inextricably linked to the maltreatment of the global old.
In particular, we have seen offenders apprehended in transgressions against the young, women, and ethnic minorities but have yet to see an active criminal justice response concerned with the experience of elder victimization.
The discipline’s reluctance to recognize elder victimization is associated with it commonly being labeled as victimization by intimates, and to be understood through the lenses of psychology and psychiatry rather than through a criminal justice model.
Care and individual needs of the elderly have been the traditional focus, rather than social justice, reason, and rights.
Justice and rights involve choice and free will.
Older people are not simply passive recipients of other people’s actions—they resist their victimization and often fight back.
This article is a critical exposition of the sources available on elders abused as part of a larger account of the experience of older people worldwide.
In particular, the reader is reminded that this article is limited due to publishing word constraints.
Therefore, it provides a balanced, limited overview of the major literature and research available in the Western context.
More pointedly, the literature cited here is intended to reflect on recent scholarship considered to have the potential of adding to the debate in criminology and elder victimization.
Given that the study of elder abuse is still in its infancy in the discipline of criminology, this article is therefore necessarily interdisciplinary.
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