Department of Psychology, Wesleyan University, 207 High Street, Judd Hall, Room 404, Middletown, CT, 06459, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2018 Oct;214:1-11. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.07.024. Epub 2018 Jul 17.
Increasingly, older adults desire to remain in their communities for as long as possible, referred to as "aging in place". While much of the aging in place literature focuses on housing specifically, there is a growing sense that social capital and community connectedness are important to the aging in place experience. The current study explores social capital in a gentrifying community to better understand the effects of rapid neighborhood change on older, African American adults.
Using a qualitative approach, group interviews were collected across nine senior housing sites (N = 98) in Central Harlem, a historically African American neighborhood in New York City. Research questions examined how older adults 'staying put' in a gentrifying neighborhood perceive changes in their social networks and larger community.
Major themes included shifting racial dynamics of the neighborhood, disruption of social ties, lack of intergenerational social cohesion and lack of social spaces for older adults, revealing a complex narrative of the network consequences of neighborhood change.
This study extends previous research, highlighting specific ways in which gentrification compromises aspects of social capital in a once predominantly Black neighborhood.
越来越多的老年人希望尽可能长时间地留在社区中,这被称为“就地老龄化”。尽管“就地老龄化”文献主要关注住房问题,但越来越多的人认为社会资本和社区联系对于就地老龄化体验很重要。本研究探讨了一个正在发生 gentrification 的社区中的社会资本,以更好地了解快速社区变化对年长的非裔美国成年人的影响。
本研究采用定性方法,在纽约市历史上是非洲裔美国人社区的中哈莱姆区的九个老年人住房点(N=98)进行了小组访谈。研究问题探讨了年长的老年人如何在一个 gentrifying 社区中“留下来”,以及他们如何看待自己社交网络和更大社区的变化。
主要主题包括社区种族动态的变化、社会联系的中断、缺乏代际社会凝聚力以及缺乏老年人的社交空间,揭示了邻里变化对网络后果的复杂叙述。
本研究扩展了先前的研究,强调了 gentrification 以特定方式损害了曾经以黑人为主的社区的社会资本的各个方面。