"What is unique in this volume is its wealth of information about legal, medical, and religious frameworks that apply to each phase. The book includes a comprehensive bibliography
as well as specific guidelines for engaging people in conversations about end-of-life planning and bereavement. Ziettlow and Cahn's captivating stories help bring the results of their research into bold relief."
--The Christian Century

Homeward Bound shows that as family structure becomes more complex, so too does elder care, and existing institutions and legal approaches are not prepared to handle those complexities. As 79 million American Baby Boomers approach old age, their diverse family structures mean the burden of care will fall on a different cast of family members than in the past. Our current approaches are based on an outdated caregiving model that presumes life-long connection between the parents and offspring, with the existence of high internal norm cohesion among family members providing a valuable safety net for caregiving. Single parent and remarried parent-led families are far more complicated, fragile, and point to the need for increased formal support from the religious, medical, legal, and public policy communities. We base our analysis on in-depth, qualitative interviews with surviving grown children and stepchildren whose mother, father, stepparent, or ex-stepparent died. Their stories illustrate the profound ways that the caregiving, mourning, and inheritance process has changed in ways not adequately reflected in formal legal, medical, and religious tools. The solutions center on awareness and preparation: providing more support for individual planning for incapacity and death and, even more importantly, creating legal, political, and social planning for the "graying of America" at a time of increasingly complex familial ties.
Les mer
Homeward Bound draws on qualitative interviews with family caregivers to explore how the legal frameworks that define the elder care, burial, and wealth transfer process are understood, accessed, ignored, or fall short. It pays close attention to the ways a family's internal norms and structure define these experiences and their relationship to the law.
Les mer
Introduction Chapter One: The New Normal in American Family Caregiving Chapter Two: Caregiving Begins Chapter Three: The Costs of Care Chapter Four: Decision-Making: With Advance Direction Chapter Five: Decision-Making: Looking for Direction Interlude: A Caregiver Becomes a Griever Chapter Six: Mourning Rubrics and Burial Chapter Seven: The Intricacies of Wealth Transfer Chapter Eight: 21st Century Caregiving Appendix A: Study Methodology Appendix B: Helpful Resources Appendix C: Bereavement Interview Tool Appendix D: Funeral Seating Chart
Les mer
"What is unique in this volume is its wealth of information about legal, medical, and religious frameworks that apply to each phase. The book includes a comprehensive bibliography as well as specific guidelines for engaging people in conversations about end-of-life planning and bereavement. Ziettlow and Cahn's captivating stories help bring the results of their research into bold relief." --The Christian Century
Les mer
Selling point: Shows how high rates of divorce, non-marriage, and remarriage are changing how families care for the terminally ill and dying Selling point: Draws upon in-depth interviews with grown children who cared for and now grieve Baby Boomer parents, stepparents, and ex-stepparents Selling point: Highlights sensitive topics related to death and end-of-life care, such as caring for an ill ex-stepparent, seating arrangements at funerals, what people truly value in an inheritance, and how families choose to end life support
Les mer
Amy Ziettlow is Affiliate Scholar at the Institute for American Values and a frequent contributor to The Atlantic and Huffington Post. Naomi Cahn is Harold H. Greene Professor of Law, George Washington University, and co-author of Red Families v. Blue Families and Marriage Markets (both with Oxford University Press).
Les mer
Selling point: Shows how high rates of divorce, non-marriage, and remarriage are changing how families care for the terminally ill and dying Selling point: Draws upon in-depth interviews with grown children who cared for and now grieve Baby Boomer parents, stepparents, and ex-stepparents Selling point: Highlights sensitive topics related to death and end-of-life care, such as caring for an ill ex-stepparent, seating arrangements at funerals, what people truly value in an inheritance, and how families choose to end life support
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780190261092
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
476 gr
Høyde
155 mm
Bredde
239 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
240

Biographical note

Amy Ziettlow is Affiliate Scholar at the Institute for American Values and a frequent contributor to The Atlantic and Huffington Post. Naomi Cahn is Harold H. Greene Professor of Law, George Washington University, and co-author of Red Families v. Blue Families and Marriage Markets (both with Oxford University Press).