Older migrants reflecting on aging through attachment to and identification with places

J Aging Stud. 2019 Sep:50:100788. doi: 10.1016/j.jaging.2019.100788. Epub 2019 Jul 5.

Abstract

With increasing numbers of older migrants adopting a transnational lifestyle or returning to their country of origin following retirement, the sense of attachment to and identification with the places they inhabit remains an under explored field of enquiry. Through an ethnographic approach, this paper seeks to raise awareness of the diversity within a group of older migrants, given the heterogeneity of affective bonds established with places. By highlighting the perspective of older Italian migrants living in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, this paper illustrates the role of a sense of identification with the context of migration in later life. In referring to migration as a process of transformation, some older Italians re-define their identities, as these become interwoven with the characteristics of the places in which they grow older. However, older migrants' sense of attachment to places also reveals the complexity of aging in the context of migration, when a sense of identification with these is never fully achieved in older age. This paper argues that the notion of aging that these older Italian migrants uphold is not only altered by their experience of migration, but also shaped through their identification with the places they inhabit, given formal and informal practices of identification. Thus, by addressing the determinants for a positive experience of aging in the context of migration, this paper challenges the ways in which older migrant groups are conceptualized in gerontological scholarship.

Keywords: Aging; Identification; Migration; Place attachment.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Aging / physiology*
  • Anthropology, Cultural / methods
  • Awareness / physiology
  • Cultural Diversity
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Identification, Psychological
  • Italy
  • Life Style / ethnology*
  • Male
  • Object Attachment
  • Retirement / psychology
  • Transients and Migrants / psychology*
  • United Kingdom / epidemiology