Pynoos J, Parrott T
Andrus Gerontology Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles 90089-0191, USA.
Gerontologist. 1996 Aug;36(4):518-29. doi: 10.1093/geront/36.4.518.
Beginning in the late 1980s, government-assisted housing for elderly persons, a popular and successful housing type, began to experience an in-movement of younger persons with disabilities. Advocates for the elderly population expressed alarm about the negative consequences for elderly persons of such "mixing" and of the turnover of this housing to other groups. Based on interviews with key participants and an analysis of documents, this article uses interest group theory and a model of agenda setting to explain why "mixing populations" attained prominence on the Federal housing agenda, the different perspectives of advocates for elderly individuals and younger persons with disabilities concerning the issue, and the implications of the conflict for housing policy and interest group politics.
从20世纪80年代末开始,政府资助的老年人住房,一种广受欢迎且成功的住房类型,开始出现残疾年轻人入住的情况。老年人群体的倡导者对这种“混居”以及该住房向其他群体流转给老年人带来的负面影响表示担忧。基于对关键参与者的访谈和文件分析,本文运用利益集团理论和议程设置模型来解释为何“人群混居”在联邦住房议程中变得突出,老年个体倡导者和残疾年轻人倡导者在该问题上的不同观点,以及这场冲突对住房政策和利益集团政治的影响。