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MONDAY JUNE 24TH 14:45-16:15: Session A TP Chair(s): Bernhard Weicht and Barbara de Roit. 7a - Marketisation of care: Strategic policy approach or unintended corollary? Elin Peterson, Department of Social Work, Stockholm University, Lea Graff, VIVE Danish Centre of Applies Social Science; Olli Karsio, University of Tampere ‘Choice’ policies in three Nordic cities: challenging equality aspirations in eldercare? Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg, Thurid Eggers, University of Hamburg; Christopher Grages, University of Hamburg Culture and the Marketization in Welfare State Policies: The Case of LTC Policy Minna Zechner, University of Lapland, Economising Care for Older Adults maud perrier, University of Bristol, Maternal Care Markets: Class divisions and workers’ mobilizations Gabrielle Meagher, Macquarie University, Australia and Stockholm University, Sweden, Marta Szebehely, Stockholm University, Sweden Contesting ‘quality’ in Swedish eldercare under marketisation: whose interests do care quality measures represent? Pär Schön, Aging Research Center, Karolinska Institutet & Stockholm university, Lauri Sääksvuori, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL); Lennarth Johansson, Stockholm Gerontology Research Center; Ismo Linnosmaa, University of Eastern Finland & National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) Integration and freedom of choice in care for older people in Sweden and Finland – Compatible policy options? Results from the CEQUA network 14:45-16:15: Session B TP chair(s): Tine Rostgaard. 3a - Reablement as a mechanism for sustainability and active long-term care Vik Kjersti, Professor, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, AIlien Bergström, Lecturer (Ph.D) Karolinska Institutet Maria Haak, assistant professor, Lund University Lea Graff, reserarcher VIVE, Danish Center for Social Science Research Silke Metzelthin, assistant professor, Maastrich University Kari Hjelle, associate professor, Western Norway University of Applied Science. Recipients, next-of-kin, and staffs’ perceptions of gains or changes attributed to reablement services – A meta- analysis of qualitative research Maria Ranner, Post doctor, Norwegian University of Science Technology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Lea Graff, Analyst, VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research. Kjersti Vik, Professor, Norwegian University of Science Technology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. Marte Feiring, Associate Professor, Oslo Metropolitan University, Faculty of Health Science. Discourses of reablement in Scandinavian policy documents Linda Sumpter, University of the West of England, Bristol. UK, Prof Jane Powell, Dr Ailie Turton, Prof Praminda Caleb- Solly, University of the West of England, Bristol Effective mechanisms in applying reablement: What works when engaging families in the reablement of older people, for whom and how? Marte Feiring, Faculty of Health Sciences, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway, Tine Rostgaard, How do the ideas and practices of reablement travel?

MONDAY JUNE 24TH - transforming-care.net · Bergen, Mariya Bikova, Department of Sociology, University of Bergen Making user participation work – ethical dilemmas in long-term care

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MONDAY JUNE 24TH

14:45-16:15: Session A

TP Chair(s): Bernhard Weicht and Barbara de Roit.

7a - Marketisation of care: Strategic policy approach or unintended corollary?

Elin Peterson, Department of Social Work, Stockholm University, Lea Graff, VIVE Danish Centre of Applies Social Science; Olli Karsio, University of Tampere

‘Choice’ policies in three Nordic cities: challenging equality aspirations in eldercare?

Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg, Thurid Eggers, University of Hamburg; Christopher Grages, University of Hamburg

Culture and the Marketization in Welfare State Policies: The Case of LTC Policy

Minna Zechner, University of Lapland, Economising Care for Older Adults

maud perrier, University of Bristol, Maternal Care Markets: Class divisions and workers’ mobilizations

Gabrielle Meagher, Macquarie University, Australia and Stockholm University, Sweden, Marta Szebehely, Stockholm University, Sweden

Contesting ‘quality’ in Swedish eldercare under marketisation: whose interests do care quality measures represent?

Pär Schön, Aging Research Center, Karolinska Institutet & Stockholm university, Lauri Sääksvuori, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL); Lennarth Johansson, Stockholm Gerontology Research Center; Ismo Linnosmaa, University of Eastern Finland & National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL)

Integration and freedom of choice in care for older people in Sweden and Finland – Compatible policy options? Results from the CEQUA network

14:45-16:15: Session B

TP chair(s): Tine Rostgaard.

3a - Reablement as a mechanism for sustainability and active long-term care

Vik Kjersti, Professor, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, AIlien Bergström, Lecturer (Ph.D) Karolinska Institutet Maria Haak, assistant professor, Lund University Lea Graff, reserarcher VIVE, Danish Center for Social Science Research Silke Metzelthin, assistant professor, Maastrich University Kari Hjelle, associate professor, Western Norway University of Applied Science.

Recipients, next-of-kin, and staffs’ perceptions of gains or changes attributed to reablement services – A meta-analysis of qualitative research

Maria Ranner, Post doctor, Norwegian University of Science Technology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Lea Graff, Analyst, VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research. Kjersti Vik, Professor, Norwegian University of Science Technology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. Marte Feiring, Associate Professor, Oslo Metropolitan University, Faculty of Health Science.

Discourses of reablement in Scandinavian policy documents

Linda Sumpter, University of the West of England, Bristol. UK, Prof Jane Powell, Dr Ailie Turton, Prof Praminda Caleb-Solly, University of the West of England, Bristol

Effective mechanisms in applying reablement: What works when engaging families in the reablement of older people, for whom and how?

Marte Feiring, Faculty of Health Sciences, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway, Tine Rostgaard,

How do the ideas and practices of reablement travel?

Professor, VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research Denmark

Kari Margrete Hjelle, Department of Occupational Therapy, Physiotherapy and Radiography, Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Olbjørg Skutle, Herdis Alvsvåg and Oddvar Førland, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences.

Prioritizing reablement and its consequences for home based nursing and municipal rehabilitation with frail older people. A comparative case study from three Norwegian municipalities.

Bryony Beresford, University of York, Emese Mayhew, University of York; Rachel Mann, University of York; Mona Kanaan, University of York; Alison Laver-Fawcett, York St John University; Fiona Aspinal, University College London.

Understanding and supporting user engagement in reablement

14:45-16:15: Session C

TP chair(s): Helene Brodin and Sara Erlandsson

1a - Managing care priorities in practice: leadership dilemmas in different contexts

Karen Christensen, Department of Sociology, University of Bergen, Mariya Bikova, Department of Sociology, University of Bergen

Making user participation work – ethical dilemmas in long-term care

Annie Dussuet, Université de Nantes, Clémence Ledoux, Université de Nantes

When professional cultures of care managers influence their ways to solve dilemma.

Yu-Shu Peng, National Dong Hwa University, Kuo, Huei-Yun

How the Private Long-Term Care Providers Overcome the Resource Disadvantages througn Entrepreneurial

Bricolage-A Case Study of LoHas Nursing Home

Alis Sopadzhiyan, French School of Public Health, ARENES (UMR 6051), France, Blanche Le Bihan, Arnaud Campéon

Care management activities and integration policies in France: the weight of pre-existing dynamics and local negotiations

Melanie Sedergreen, Vancouver Island University & University of Calgary,

Teachers' Care Work: Undervalued and Invisible within Prevalent Discourses

Shu-Er Wei, Department for Life-and-Death Studies Nanhua University, Jen-Der Lue, Professor at dept. of social welfare, national Chung Chen University

Care management or Case managemet?- The Impact and Paradox of Policy Innovation on Long-Term Care ABC 2.0 Model in Taiwan

14:45-16:15: Session D

Symposia 6: Valeria Pulignano and Marta Szebehely

Care work and change. An across (and within) country comparison of working conditions and job quality in the care sector

Dorien Frans, Doctoral Researcher, Nadja Doerflinger, Postdoctoral Researcher and Full Professor Valeria

“The (changing) landscape of elderly care in Be lgium: challenges and outcomes for quality of working life.”

Pulignano, Centre for Sociological Research (Ceso), Faculty of Social Science, Belgium

Matthew Johnson, Senior Lecturer In Organisation Studies, Alliance Manchester Business School United Kingdom, Associate Professor Arista Koukiadaki, Alliance Manchester Business School, United Kingdom and Núria Sánchez-Mira, Postdoctoral fellow, Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research LIVES, Institut des Sciences Sociales Quartier UNIL- University of Lausanne, Switzerland

“Different means to the same end? The value (and limits) of socially responsible procurement in older people’s care in the UK and Spain in a context of austerity”

Nadja Doerflinger, Postdoctoral Researcher and Full Professor Valeria Pulignano, Centre for Sociological Research (Ceso), Faculty of Social Science, Belgium

‘Labour of love’ versus profit maximization? Comparing working conditions in charitable and for-profit nursing homes in Germany

Andrea Ciarini, Assistant Professor. Department of Social and Economic Sciences (DiSSE), Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

“The marketisation of care in Italy. The intended» and «unintended consequences of the “aziende speciali”

14:45-16:15: Session E

TP chair(s): Simon Lieber and August Österle

18a - Comparative perspectives on live-in care migration

Mirko Di Rosa, National Institute of Health and Science on Ageing, IRCCS INRCA, Ancona, Italy, Francesco Barbabella (IRCCS INRCA, Ancona, Italy; Linnaeus University, Kalmar, Sweden); Arianna Poli (Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden; IRCCS INRCA, Ancona, Italy); Sara Santini (IRCCS INRCA, Ancona, Italy); Giovanni Lamura (IRCCS INRCA, Ancona, Italy)

The Impact of Live-in Migrant Work in the Italian Elder Care Sector

Dóra Gábriel, Hungarian Demographic Research Institute - Junior Research Fellow,

Transnational care obligations and assumed cost-benefit calculation of Hungarian live-in care workers employed in Austria

Michael Leiblfinger, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Brigitte Aulenbacher, Veronika Prieler (both: Johannes Kepler University Linz)

Wind of change? Perspectives on the Austrian 24-h-care model

Rossana Trifiletti, University of Florence, Transnationalism of migrant careworkers. Is it possible to propose a model?

Kamil Matuszczyk, University of Warsaw, The role of private intermediaries in changing live-in care migration between Poland and Germany

Ewa Slezak, Cracow University Of Economics, Petra Ezzeddine, Charles University

Migrant caregivers in transforming societies: translocal care chains and multiple vulnerabilities (cases of Poland and the Czech Republic)

14:45-16:15: Session F

TP chair(s): Maša Filipovič Hraste and Andrej Srakar

16a - Care regimes and task division – comparative evidence

Tiziana Naizo, WZB - Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung,

The demographic dimension of emotional support and care provision: a 5 countries comparison

Johanna Fischer, Collaborative Research Centre 1342 “Global Dynamics of Social Policy”, University of Bremen (Germany), Lorraine Frisina Doetter (CRC 1342, University of Bremen); Heinz Rothgang (CRC 1342, University of Bremen)

Classifying long term care systems – a conceptual framework for comparative research

Andrej Srakar, Institute for Economic Research (IER) and Faculty of Economics, University of Ljubljana, Masa Filipovic Hrast, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana; Ricardo Rodrigues, European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research; Stefania Ilinca, European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research; Valentina Hlebec, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana

Gender roles in familialistic regimes: income and education matter

Anna Safuta, University of Bremen, Heinz Rothgang & Kristin Noack, University of Bremen

Migrant care workers needed urgently: Explaining transnational interdependencies in long-term care provision using causal chains

Christian Gräfe, University of Duisburg-Essen, Faculty of Educational Sciences, Institute of Social Work and Social Policy,

“The time is out of joint”. Temporal dimensions of family establishment in the context of recent reconfigurations of family policies in the German welfare state

14:45-16:15: Session G

TP chair(s): Virpi Timonen and Blanca Deusdad

4a - Technology for care and living: Solutions and challenges

Angelos Balatsas-Lekkas, Research scientist, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd, (Digital transformation team),

Involving older users in the digital transformation of care services

Antti Hämäläinen, University of Jyväskylä, Helena Hirvonen, University of Jyväskylä

Negotiating the sociotechnical practices of communication in LTC work

Anna Sachinopoulou, VTT Ltd., Finland, Jaana Kokko, City of Oulu, Finland; Angelos Balatsas-Lekkas, VTT Ltd., Finland

Developing end-user vantage points against the digital divide in care service development

Aiwen Yin, Independent researcher, Jelena Viskovic Reimagine

Kaja Zapedowska-Kling, University of Lodz, Poland,

Senior Policy 2.0. – Conceptual Framework for Including Digitalisation and Technologisation into the Mainstream Policies Towards the Elderly

Annette Kamp, Roskilde University, Department of People and Technology, Agnete Meldgaard Hansen, Roskilde University, Department of People and Technology; Sidsel Lond Grosen, Roskilde University, Department of People and Technology

Negotiating the temporalities of care – new technologies in professional care work

16:45-18:15 Session A

TP chair(s):

Ricardo Rodriguez and Marta Szebehely

20a - Transforming care work: Impact on working conditions and job quality

Tine Rostgaard, VIVE-The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Mads Matthiessen, Teppo Kröger, Jiby Mathews, Rebecka Strandell, Anneli Stranz & Mia Vabø

Changes in Nordic care work and their effects on work related problems for workers in long-term care

Marta Szebehely, Stockholm University, Department of Social Work, Teppo Kröger University of Jyväskylä, Finland; Tine Rostgaard, VIVE, Denmark; Anneli Stranz, Stockholm University and Mia Vabø, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway.

Are formal care workers a forgotten group in a Nordic ‘passion for equality’?

Ricardo Rodrigues, European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research, Anneli Stranz, Stockholm University

Working conditions of migrant and native workers in long-term care in Austria and Sweden: a tale of two countries and multiple individual stories

Rebecka Strandell, Stockholm University, Department of social work,

Under what conditions are Nordic home-care workers willing to stay in their job?

Matt Ferguson, American University, Caring for Carers: The Impact of Institutional Failures of Care on Social Workers

Jiby Mathew Puthenparambil, University of Jyväskylä, Unable to provide adequate care for older people? Experience of carer workers.

16:45-18:15 Session B

TP chair(s):

Bernhard Weicht and Barbara de Roit

7b - Marketisation of care: Strategic policy approach or unintended corollary?

Clémence Ledoux, Université de Nantes, Franca van Hooren, University of Amsterdam ; Karen Shire, Universität Duisburg

The Dynamics of welfare markets in the home based care sector

Eva Lloyd, Professor of Early Childhood, University of East London, Ivana La Valle, Visiting Scholar, University of East London

The marketisation of childcare and children’s residential care in England

Paweł Łuczak, Department of Labour and Social Policy, Poznań University of Economics and Business, Poznań, Poland,

‘Grey’ marketisation in institutional elderly care: theoretical conceptualisation

Ralf Och, University of Hamburg, Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg

Marketisation of care for older people in German local policies – the role of welfare cultures and governance structures

Thomas Bahle, University of Mannheim, Mareike Ariaans (University of Mannheim), Katharina Koch (University of Mannheim), Claus Wendt (University of Siegen)

Dual Marketization in Healthcare and Social Care Systems – Interaction and impact on long-term care service delivery

XI LIU, Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford,

Transforming Eldercare from Filial to Social Responsibility? Meanings of “Socialising Social Welfare” in China

16:45-18:15 Session C

TP chair(s):

Helene Brodin and Sara Erlandsson

1b - Managing care priorities in practice: leadership dilemmas in different contexts

Costanzo Ranci, Politecnico di Milano, Arlotti Marco Resistance to change. The difficulty of implementing institutional innovation in Italian long-term care

Maria Wolmesjö, University of Borås, Sweden, Lotta Dellve, Gothenburg University, Sweden, Anindo Bhattacharjee, Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies, Mumbai, India

Bringing Policy into Practice – Models of Value Integrated Eldercare in India and Sweden

Andreas Büscher, University of Applied Sciences Osnabrück, Germany, Klaus Wingenfeld, Institute of nursing science at the University of Bielefeld

The long way from task-based to needs-based professional home care nursing services in recent reforms of the German long-term care insurance

Astrid Sundsbø, Centre for Care Research (University of Applied Sciences in Western Norway),

Prioritizing dilemmas – decision making and reflections of frontline workers within care services for frail older people

Albert Banerjee, NBHRF Research Chair in Community Health and Aging, Department of Gerontology, St.Thomas University, New Brunswick, Canada, Dee Taylor, Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Health and Social Development University of British Columbia Okanagan, Canada; Anneli Stranz, Department of Social Work, Stockholm University, Sweden; Anita Wahl, Clinical nurse specialist, Fraser Health Residential Care, Assisted Living & Specialized Populations British Columbia, Canada

Caring innovation: Listening to staff to improve care for older persons in nursing homes

Heying Zhan, Georgia State University, Dr. Zhou, Jianfei, Dr. Zhou, Mingfei

Integrating medical and long term care—a case study of “Smart Aging” in community based medical and long term care in Nanjing, China

16:45-18:15 Session D

Symposia 4:

Pat Armstrong

Privatization: The Case of Nursing Homes

Pat Armstrong, Distinguished Research Professor, Department of Sociology, York University, Toronto, Canada

‘Forms of privatization’

Gudmund Ågotnes, Postdoctoral Fellow, Centre for Care Research Western Norway University of Applied Sciences Bergen, Norway, presenting author; co-authors Frode Jacobsen, Marta Szebehely

‘Privatization in the Norwegian and Swedish nursing home sector’

Hugh Armstrong, Distinguished Research Professor, Professor Emeritus of Social Work and Political Economy, Carleton University Ottawa, Canada

‘Contracting Care’

Rachel Barken, Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Sociology, York University Toronto, Canada

‘Unpaid care in public places’

Liz Lloyd, Professor of School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol, United Kingdom

‘Older Residents’ Experiences of Risk in a Market System of Nursing Homes’

16:45-18:15 Session E

TP chair(s):

Karina Batthany and Natalia Genta

23a - Care in South America: Challenges and tensions in research and public policies

Valentina Perrotta, Universidad de la República - Facultad de Ciencias Sociales - Uruguay,

Gender and childcare policies in Uruguay: moving towards a virtuous relationship?

Natalia Genta, Departamento de Sociología, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, UDELAR, Karina Batthyány, Departamento de Sociología, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, UDELAR

Reconfiguration of Child Care Strategies: Challenges from a Gender Perspective

Jasmine Gideon, Birkbeck, University of London, Alejandra Ramm, Universidad de Valparaiso & Diego Portales, Santiago, Chile.

A cross-sectoral analysis of maternalism in Chilean social policy: what does this mean for care?

Mauricio Matus López, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Luana Chirila

New policies of Long-term Care in Latin America. Uruguay, Chile and Costa Rica

Mariana de Santibañes, New York University,

Building a Care Agenda From The Bottom Up: The Relevance of Policy Narratives in the Design of Uruguay's Comprehensive Care System

Lucilene Morandi, Faculty of Economics - Fluminense Federal University (UFF), Hildete Pereira de Melo - Faculty of Economics - Fluminense Federal University (UFF) ; Ruth H. Dweck - Faculty of Economics - Fluminense Federal University (UFF)

The impact of public care policies on women's income in Brazil

16:45-18:15 Session F

TP chair(s):

Birgit Pfau-Effinger and Ralf Och

15a - Changing Cultural Ideas and Care Policies across Welfare States and Policy Levels

Laura Cataldi, Department of Cultures, Politics and Society - University of Turin, Valeria Cappellato - Department of Cultures, Politic and Society - University of Turin

New Welfare Narratives in Italy: Risks and supposed Virtues

Jack Wing Kit Chan, School of Government, Sun Yat-sen University,

Is Long-term Care Insurance a right choice for China: An Examination on Experience and Practices

Patrick Hall, University of Birmingham, Professor Catherine Needham

Comparing UK care values

Anat Herbst-Debby (PhD), Bar Ilan University, Tal Meler (PhD) and Maha Karkabi-Sabbah (PhD)

"Deserving" and "responsible" motherhood: Palestinian motherhood in Israel and welfare-to-work program

Amalie Hauge, VIVE, Sarah Wadmann, VIVE, Eva Iris Otto, independent researcher

What is priority setting? A review of the literature on priority setting within the field of hospital pharmaceuticals

Gabriel Amitsis, Department of Business Administration (Social Policy Unit) - University of West Attica, Foteini Marini, Univesrity of West Attica

“Cultural Ideas and Care Policies during austerity times - The interplay between fiscal welfare and active inclusion discourses in Greece”

16:45-18:15 Session G

TP chair(s):

Karina Andersson

14a - Priorities for quality of care and user-centred care – implications for formal and informal care workers

Hildur Kalman, Department of Social Work, Umeå University, Sweden, Katarina Andersson, Department of Social Work, Umeå University, Sweden

Participation and influence in intimate care? – in practice versus present-day policies

Anne-Marie Mahoney, La Trobe University, Suzanne Hodgkin, Samantha Clune, Pauline Savy, Shaun Hancock

Scoping the skills and training needs of community care workers in rural locations

Agnete Meldgaard Hansen, Roskilde University, Department of People and Technology,

Dignified equals distanced? Pursuing dignity in user-centred care practices

Kirstein Rummery, University of Stirling, The costs and benefits of formal personalised care

Nuri Cayuelas Mateu, AQuAS- Agència de Qualitat i Avaluació Sanitàries de Catalunya., Ambugo, E.A.(Universitetet i Oslo), De Bruin, S.R., S(National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM)), Masana, L.(AQuAS), MacInnes, J.(University of Kent), Hagen, T.P.(Universitetet i Oslo), Arrue, B.(Age Platform Europe), on behalf of the SUSTAIN consortium.

A cross-European study of informal caregivers’ own experiences with health and social services: The SUSTAIN project.

Emma O' Shea, Dublin City University, Dr Suzanne Timmons, Univeristy College Cork; Professor Eamon O' Shea, National University of Ireland, Galway; Professor Kate Irving, Dublin City University

The perspectives of people with dementia on day and respite services: A qualitative interview study

Cristiano Gori, Department of Sociology and Social Research - University of Trento, Italy,

Prioritizing coverage or intensity in Long-Term Care? A comparative analysis of trends across European Countries

Tine Rostgaard, VIVE-The Danish Center for Social Science Research, Mads Matthiessen, VIVE

Targeting home care: new patterns of distribution and inequalities in Danish home care for older people

Costanzo Ranci, Politecnico di Milano, Marco Arlotti, August Oesterle, Andrea Parma

Coverage vs Generosity. Comparing eligibility and need assessment in six Cash for Care programs

Håkan Jönson, School of Social Work, Lund University, Tove Harnett, School of Social Work, Lund University

Wet eldercare facilities for older persons with substance abuse problems and complex needs – promising care practices or institutionalized ageism?

Alexandra GARABIGE, Institut national d'études démographiques, Loic Trabut (Institut national d'études démographiques), Joelle Gaymu (Institut national d'études démographiques

Does the population matter? Biographic analysis of local care regimes

Dr. Suzanne Hughes, Post Doc Researcher, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge,U.K.,

Domiciliary care, self and older age

9:00-10:30 Session B

TP chair(s):

Matteo Luppi and Tiziana Nazio

6a - The intergenerational mutual interdependence in aging societies

Mikkel Rytter, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Aarhus University,

The Circle of Life: Care Arrangements and Marriage Strategies in Pakistani families in Denmark

Adéla Souralová, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic,

Mutual caregiving and care-receiving in three-generation households

Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg, Thurid Eggers, University of Hamburg; Christopher Grages, University of Hamburg

The Role of Culture and Care Policies for Older People’s Caring Decision - the Case of Germany

Junko Yamashita, University of Bristol, UK, Naoko Soma, Yokohama National University, Japan

Multi-generational care, Integrated Ambivalence and Integrated Care.

Guiliana Costa, Politecnico di Milano, Intergenerational Homesharing, a growing response to housing and social support needs”

Elena Moore, Department of Sociology, University of Cape Town,

He supports my sister and I support him: The unintended consequences of financially supporting elderly parents in South Africa

9:00-10:30 Session C

TP chair(s):

Ricardo Rodriguez and Marta Szebehely

20b - Transforming care work: Impact on working conditions and job quality

Olivier Crasset, Centre nantais de sociologie, France (Cens, UMR 6025), Annie DUSSUET, Centre nantais de sociologie, France (Cens, UMR 6025)

Advantages and setbacks of autonomy for home helpers in direct employment

Gareth Crockett, Sheffield University Management School, University of Sheffield, UK, Prof Rachael Finn, Sheffield University Management School, University of Sheffield; Dr Diane Burns, Sheffield University Management School, University of Sheffield and The Centre for International Research on Care, Labour and Equalities (CIRCLE)

Colonising and medicalising care: workforce reconfiguration in residential care in the UK

Sara Erlandsson, Dep. of Social Work, Stockholm University, Marta Szebehely, Dep. of Social Work, Stockholm University; Helene Brodin, Dep. of Social Work, Stockholm University

Care Work in Different Arenas: Working Conditions in Swedish Eldercare and Disability Services

Margareta Kreimer, University of Graz, Department of Economics, Mila Jonjic, University of Graz, Department of Economics

Integration of Refugees in the Care Sector – opportunities and barriers

Eva Schömer, Kristianstad University, Sweden, Procurement of welfare services – consequences for workers in home care

Maria Wolmesjö, University of Borås, Sweden, Sustainable organization towards a transformative and attractive home care

9:00-10:30 Session D

Symposia 5:

Monique Kremer

Care arrangements in context of migration

1. Monique Kremer, University of Amsterdam: Dealing with super-diversity in care. Dutch home care practices in times of migration. Analysis of Dutch home care policies stems from an in-depth qualitative case study of ‘Kings Care’: a home care organisation based in Hague, established and owned by individuals with a Turkish background, which considers its care provision to be ‘culture -sensitive’.

2. Guðný Björk Eydal, Professor, and Ásdís Arnalds, PhD student, University of Iceland: Polish and Icelandic parents’ division of paid parental leave in Iceland. As Poles are the largest migrant group in Iceland, this study addresses how Polish migrants use parental leave in comparison to parents who are born and raised in Iceland.

3. Roos Pijpers, Associate Professor, Radboud University: The impact of neighbourhood-based working for access to care of older migrants. In the Netherlands, the neighbourhood is increasingly viewed as an ideal place to organise care and social services. This qualitative study of care services in the city of Nijmegen focuses on the development of practices relevant to older migrants’ access to care. 4. Lenka Formánková, Junior Researcher, Academy of Sciences: Negotiated childcare arrangements in the context of migration – case study of Vietnamese and Ukrainian families in the Czech Republic. Based on family and migration policy analysis (analysis of legal documents) and on analysis of interviews conducted with mothers with children under 10 of Vietnamese and Ukrainian origin, this paper aims to fill the gap in social policy research regarding work-life balance within the context of migration.

9:00-10:30 Session E

TP chair(s):

Bernhard Weicht and Barbara de Roit

7c - Marketisation of care: Strategic policy approach or unintended corollary?

Yongho Chon, Department of Social Welfare, Incheon National University,

Too much dependence on market forces and back to the public sector?: The experiences of Korean long-term care insurance

David Feltenius, Department of Political Science, Umeå university, Sweden, Jessika Wide, Department of Political Science, Umeå university, Sweden

Surviving the competition? On municipal home care services in a marketised elderly care

Suzanne Hodgkin, La Trobe University, Samantha Clune, Anne-Marie Mahoney

Marketization of community aged care services in rural and remote Australia. Does the rhetoric match the reality?

Youngbin Kwon, University of Jyvaskyla,

The third sector and care for older people: A comparative analysis of home care policy in Finland, the UK and South Korea

Amaya Alvarez, Future Social Service Institute, RMIT University,

‘If they could be in my life for a day’: lived experience research and the lives of carers within changing systems of care and support

Greg Arling, School of Nursing, Purdue University, United States, Zachary Hass, School of Nursing and School of Industrial Engineering, Purdue University, United States

Response of For-Profit, Non-Profit, and Government-Owned Nursing Homes to a New Value-Based Reimbursement System in Minnesota (US)

9:00-10:30 Session F

TP chair(s):

Yueh-Ching Chou and Teppo Kröger

24a - Changing priorities of disability policies and care/assistance for disabled people in different care regimes

Bo-wei Chen, Department of Sociology Soochow University, Taiwan, Yueh-Ching Chou Institute of Health and Welfare Policy National Yang-Ming University, Taiwan ([email protected])

They are like my own children”: Bodywork, intimate labour, and frontline women carers of women with an intellectual disability in institutions

Christine Kelly, Assistant Professor, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Lisette Dansereau, PhD student, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Katie Aubrecht, Canada Research Chair Health Equity & Social Justice, St. Francis Xavier University, Amanda Grenier, Professor and Gilbrea Chair in Aging & Mental Health, McMaster University, and Allison Williams, Professor and CIHR Research Chair in Gender, Work and Health, McMaster University

From disabled activists to older people and their families: Understanding the role of directly-funded home care in Canada

Francesca Pozzoli, University of Milan, The journey of 'choice agendas' in disability policy and practice. How do the UK and Italy compare?

Angela Genova, Department of Economics, Society, Politics,

Transforming disability policies in Mediterranean welfare regime: families in traps

Yueh-Ching Chou, National Yang-Ming University, Teppo Kröger

Caring and ageing in place together? Care and housing transition plans of older parents and their ageing offspring with intellectual disabilities

Michele Foster, The Hopkins Centre, Menzies Health Institute Queensland, Griffith University, Kylie Burns, Griffith Law School, Griffith University; Susan Harris Rimmer, Griffith Law School, Griffith University

Paradox of priorities: Choice and conditionality of rights in Australia’s National Disability Insurance Scheme

9:00-10:30 Session G

TP chair(s):

Emmanuel Pavolini and Margarita Leon

11a - Care as a labour market: Care occupations and professions between quality and contractual arrangements

Hanne Marlene Dahl, Dept. of Social science and Business, Roskilde University, Kathrine Carstensen (DEFACTUM), Viola Burau (Aarhus University) and Andreas Nielsen Hald (Aalborg University)

Care professions as heroes: Institutional work in Danish elderly care

Duncan Fisher, Teesside University, UK,

The perceptions and experiences of gendered work among young adult social care workers in Teesside, north-east England

Stefano Neri, University of Milan, Outsourcing and hybridization in the employment regulation, The case of ECEC services in Italy

Anna Rosinska, Ca' Foscari University of Venice & University of Massachusetts in Lowell,

Dimensions of inequality and privilege - white non-Hispanic American women in paid domestic and care work in the USA

Zhe Yan, University of Wuerzburg, Ethics Behind Dirty Work: Eldercare Workers’ Experiences in China’s Caregiving

11:00-12:30 Session A

TP chair(s):

Birgit Pfau-Effinger and Ralf Och

15b - Changing Cultural Ideas and Care Policies across Welfare States and Policy Levels

Julie Jarty, University of Toulouse 2, France,

The return of maternalist childcare policies? When feminist ideas on care conflict with the medical and scientific legitimity.

Sam Mohun Himmelweit, LSE,

Policy entrepreneurs, problems and solutions: ideas and work-family policy reform in England and Germany, 1998-2008

Liu Chieh-hsiu, Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford,

“Care Going Public” in the Familialist Welfare Regime: Diverging Policy Ideas in Taiwan’s Elder Care Reform

Iris Loffeier, Scientific Officer HESAV-HES-SO, Célia Poulet, HESAV-HES-SO ; Sophia Stavrou, HESAV-HES-SO

Pedagogising care workers to change ideas and practices in elderly care – continuous training for a culture change?

Monica Sorensen, International Foundation for Integrated Care, Nieves Ehrenberg, International Foundation for Integrated Care, both on behalf of the TransForm project

Promising practises of integrated community care

Matt Withers, Macquarie University (Sydney), Decent Care for Migrant Families: Policy Alternatives to Sri Lanka’s Family Background Report

11:00-12:30 Session B

TP chair(s):

Tamara Daly and Susan Braedley

2a - Age(ing in the) Friendly City: Global Guidelines / Diverse Realities

Albert Banerjee, NBHRF Research Chair in Community Health and Aging, Department of Gerontology, St.Thomas University, New Brunswick, Canada, Sachne J. Kilner

Changing stories of self, changing priorities: turning to yoga to re-imagine aging.

Ruth Bartlett, VID Specialised University, Tula Brannelly What does ‘access’ mean to people with dementia? An initial analysis based on empirical data.

Susan Braedley, School of Social Work and Institute of Political Economy, Carleton University, Karine Cote Boucher, Université de Montreal

"Age-Friendly" for Whom? Bordering Older Immigrants

Tamara Daly, York University, Tesia Wood Traversing the Cityscape of Aging and Equity

David Oluwasegun Yusuf, Partnership for African Social and Governance Research Nairobi Kenya,

Sustainable Urban Transformations and the Ageing-Migration Nexus: A Case study of Lagos and Johannesburg

LAURA ELENA ZARATE NEGRETE, UNIVERSITY OF GUANAJUATO, MA. EUGENIA SANCHEZ RAMOS, DIANA DEL CONSUELO CALDERA GONZALEZ

WORK AS A SATISFACTOR OF BELONGING OF THE ADULT

11:00-12:30 Session C

TP chair(s):

Lina Van Aerschot and Teppo Kröger

21b - Inequalities and care needs in old age

Nicola Brimblecombe, London School of Economics and Political Science, Derek King, Madeleine Stevens, Martin Knapp, London School of Economics and Political Science

What can the experiences of informal carers contribute to an understanding of inequalities in care?

Trish Hill, Social Policy Research Centre, UNSW Sydney, Myra Hamilton, UNSW Sydney and Bettina Cass, UNSW Sydney

Understanding unmet aged care need and care inequalities among older Australians

Myra Lewinter, Department of sociology, University of Copenhagen,

Inequalities in access to elder care in an advanced welfare society and the Nordic model of welfare: perspectives

Mie MORIKAWA, Department of Policy Studies, Tsuda University, Japan,

Transforming Total Social Organization of Elder care and its Unequal Impact on Elder care in Japan

Simone Leiber, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany, Diana Auth, University of Applied Sciences, Bielefeld; Sigrid Leitner, University of Applied Sciences, Cologne, Germany

The interrelation of class, ethnicity, gender, and employment in coping with elderly care: an intersectional analysis addressing family caregivers in Germany

Anne-Marie Mahoney, La Trobe University, Suzanne Hodgkin, Samantha Clune, Pauline Savy, Shaun Hancock

Scoping the skills and training needs of community care workers in rural locations

11:00-12:30 Session D

Symposia: 3

Silke Metzelthin

Implementing reablement in home care – what are we talking about?

1. Silke Metzelthin, Assistent Professor, Department of Health Services Research, Care and Public Health Research Institute (CAPHRI), Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht University, the Netherlands

Key components and definition of reablement: a Delphi study

2. Teuni H. Rooijackers PhD., Department of Health Services Research, Care and Public Health Research Institute (CAPHRI), Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht University, the Netherlands

Findings of a process evaluation investigating the feasibili ty of a Dutch reablement programme

3. Prof. dr. Matthew Parsons, School of Nursing, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland, New Zealand

4. Elissa Burton, Doctor of School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, Faculty of Health Sciences, Curtin University, Australia

Utilising physical activity programs within reablement to improve physical function

5. Prof. dr. Tine Rostgaard, VIVE Danish Centre of Applied Social Science, Den : Outcomes in community-dwelling frail older adults

11:00-12:30 Session E

TP chair(s):

Margarita Leon and Stefania Sabatinelli

22a - What ECEC services in the context of rising child poverty?

Ignazia Bartholini, University of Palermo, Low birth rate between structural gaps and "female social capital" in southern Italy

Stefano Neri, University of Milan, Trajectories in outsourcing ECEC services under austerity conditions. The case of Italy

Ivana Dobrotic, Marie Curie Fellow, University of Oxford, Department of Social Policy and Intervention,

Redistributive ‘winners and losers’ of childcare policies: (in)equality dynamic of childcare policies reforms in the post-Yugoslav countries

Helga Spadina, Faculty of Law Osijek, Social Work Undergraduate Program, Department of Labor and Social Law, Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek, Croatia,

Is Stay –At Home – Parent Allowance a Bridge Towards Inequality of Beneficiary Parents and Children?

Basak Akkan, Bogazici University Social Policy Forum,

To what extent ECEC could tackle socio-economic disadvantages in an era of marketisation: The prioritisation of ECEC in Turkey in the 2000s

11:00-12:30 Session F

TP chair(s):

Murat Senturk and Yusuf Adıgüzel

19a - Social and Health Care Policies for Elderly Migrants in Europe

Anika Liversage, VIVE - the Danish Center for Social Science Research,

Care, migration and remarriage – documenting a gendered pattern amongst older immigrants

Alessandro Sciullo, University of Turin, Roberta Ricucci Getting old in a Foreign Land: imaginaries and policies for ageing immigrants in an Italian urban context

Harmandeep Kaur Gill, PhD student, The Pursuit for Intimate Others

Louise Ryan, University of Sheffield, Dr Majella Kilkey, Magdolna Lorinc and Obert Tawodzera, University of Sheffield

Analysing ageing in and out of place

Ferhan Saniye Palaz, PhD Candidate, A Micro-Level Interpretation for Social and Health Care Policies: Case of Older Turkish Immigrants in Germany

Obert Tawodzera, The University of Sheffield, UK, Prof. Louise Ryan; Dr Majella Kilkey; Magda Lorinc

Ageing migrants in the UK

11:00-12:30 Session G

TP chair(s):

Anna Safuta and Lorraine Frisina

9a - Making the informal formal. Incentivizing the role of family care givers and migrant care workers in the provision of long term care within the home

Roos Galjaard, Bureau PAU - Groningen, The Netherlands/ University of Agder, Norway, Santiago Gil Martinez - University of Agder, Norway / Maud Diemer - CMO STAMM Groningen, The Netherlands / Elise van Opstal - City of Aalst, Belgium

Informal care and volunteering assistance in Europe, a country comparison in the North Sea region.

Sara Lei Sparre, Department of Anthropology, Aarhus University,

Gendered care of ageing migrants and their families in the welfare state: The case of the self-appointed helper arrangement in Denmark

Janet Fast, University of Alberta (Canada), Norah Keating, Swansea University (Wales), Northwest University (South Africa), and University of Alberta (Canada); Jacquie Eales, University of Alberta (Canada); Yeonjung Lee, University of Calgary (Canada)

Life course trajectories of family care: Implications for care policy

Liz Lloyd, University of Bristol UK, Tricia Jesiman, Ailsa Cameron, Randall Smith, Agnes Bezzina. University of Bristol

Providing care in later life: problems with recognition and support from local authorities in England

Tae-Young Yun, PhD candidate, Faculty of Social Sciences in Georg-August University in Goettingen, Germany,

Family’s Responses to the Formalisation of Elderly Care: The Experiences of the Family Care Helpers (FCHs) of the Long-Term Care Insurance (LTCI) for the Elderly in South Korea

Who is Taking Care of Chinese Disabled Elders?

15:45-17:15 Session A

TP chair(s):

Tine Rostgaard

3b - Reablement as a mechanism for sustainability and active long-term care

Bryony Beresford, University of York, Susan Clarke, Rachel Mann, (University of York) Fiona Aspinal (University College London).

Towards a theory of reablement

Chia-Chun Chang, Institute of Health and Welfare Policy, National Yang-Ming University,

Enable or disable? The disjuncture between formal care program and user’s everyday life

Lea Graff, VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science Research, John Parsons, The University of Auckland, New Zealand. Elissa Burton, Curtin University, Perth, Australia. Silke F. Metzelthin, Maastricht University, the Netherlands. Hilary O’Connell, Independent Living Centre Western Australia, Australia. Hanne Tuntland, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway

Reablement as an evolution in community care: a comparison of implementation across five countries

rudi westendorp, public health, university of copenhagen, denmark, Daniel Doh, Senior Research Officer, Access Care Network, Australia; Maria Ranner, Doctor, Norwegian University of Science Technology, Norway; Hanne Tuntland, Associate Professor, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway; Magnus Zingmark, Doctor, Umeå University, Sweden; Susanne Guidetti, Senior Lecturer, Karolinska Insitute, Sweden

Examining clients level outcomes of reablement: A cross-country comparative analysis

Kari Jokstad, PhD candidate, Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, University of South-Eastern Norway.,

User involvement in reablement: Ideal or reality?

Amy Clotworthy, University of Copenhagen, Caring humans: how reablement programmes transform the care relationship

15:45-17:15 Session B

TP chair(s):

Birgit Pfau-Effinger and Ralf Och

15c - Changing Cultural Ideas and Care Policies across Welfare States and Policy Levels

Margarita Leon, Associate Professor Politics, Emmanuele Pavolini, Joan Miró, Antonino Sorrentini

Policy change and partisan politics: understanding family policy differentiation in two similar countries

Ingela Naumann, University of Edinburgh, Childcare policies and individualization trends in European welfare states: similar and yet so different

Jutta Pulkki, Tampere University, Outi Jolanki, Tamperen University & University of Juväskylä

Distributed Agency in Old Age Policy Implementation – How (inter)national policy ideas diffuse and transform into local practices?

Mia Vabø, NOVA, Oslo Metropolitan University, The role of reablement in different institutional settings

Hanzhou Zhang, Si-mian Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities, Knowledge and Action Lab, East China Normal University, Huan Chen (School of Philosophy, Wuhan University), This article is co-authored, Hanzhou Zhang and Huan Chen are first-authors.

Why Could Relationship not Ground Care Ethics? ——Some Discussions Based on the Disputes between Noddings and Slote

paz moscoso, Universidad de los Andes-Chile, A person-centered nursing curriculum for Chile

15:45-17:15 Session C

TP chair(s):

Lina Van Aerschot and Teppo Kröger

21c - Inequalities and care needs in old age

Rahel Strohmeier Navarro Smith, Departement of Social Work, University of Applied Sciences, Zurich,

The non-take up of social benefits in Switzerland: unequal access to day and night care

Switzerlang, Prof. Dr. Monika Götzö; Fiona Gisler; Dr. Konstantin Kehl; Barbara Baumeister

Petra Ulmanen, Stockholm University, Department of Social Work, Helene Brodin, Stockholm University, Department of Social Work

The role of gender and country of birth for the extent and consequences of informal caregiving in Sweden

Lizzie Ward, School of Applied Social Science, University of Brighton, UK, Phil Locke, School of Applied Social Science, University of Brighton, UK

Inequality and the social care ‘crisis’ in England: older people and self-funded care

Tove Harnett, School of Social Work, Lund University, Håkan Jönson, School of Social Work, Lund University

Chronological age as a determinant of care needs - attitudes among Swedish case managers

Aliia Nizamova, European University at Saint Petersburg, Russia,

Agency and ageing with dementia: the case of the geriatric care in Russia

Ana Paula Gil, Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences – CICS.NOVA, Manuel Luís Vila Capelas, Instituto de Ciências da Saúde e Centro de Investigação Inderdisciplinar em Saúde da Universidade Católica Portuguesa, [email protected]

Elder mistreatment in Portuguese care homes: intersections with organisational and professional factors – a mixed methods study

15:45-17:15 Session D

TP chair(s):

Kate O’Loughlin

Innovation for sustainable care: International perspectives from industry and practice

1. Kate O’Loughlin, Associate Professor, University of Sydney, Sydney (presenter); Freya Saich, Carers New South Wales; Zoi Triandafilidis, Carers New South Wales, Australia

‘Australia’s flexible work policies to support working carers: How flexible is flexible?’

2. Karla Zimpel-Leal, Innovation Fellow, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom

‘Emerging models of home care providers in the UK’

3. Fiona Macdonald, Senior Research Fellow, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia

‘Worker cooperatives as an organisational alternative in individualised care systems’

4. Matthew Lariviere, Innovation Fellow, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom

‘Designing wellbeing: Imagining futures of care through emergent technologies’

15:45-17:15 Session E

TP chair(s):

Anita Castro-Garcia and Carmen Castro Pérez-Carames

12a - After Austerity Policies: Trends for Care and Gender Equality

Julie Jarty, University of Toulouse 2, France,

Reconfigurations and displacements of child-care policies (post)austerity European societies. A cross-national comparison between England, Finland, France, Italia and Spain.

Teresa Jurado-Guerrero , Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Jacobo Muñoz-Comet

Successful fathers’ leave reform despite economic recession: The Spanish case

Paula Rodriguez-Modroño, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Seville (Spain), Mauricio Matus-López

Evolution of childcare and long-term care policies in different care and gender regimes and its impacts on gender equality

Kirstein Rummery, University of Stirling, Investing in formal person-centred social care: wider costs and benefits

Bephyer Parey, Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies, The University of the West Indies,

Care Views towards Older Persons with Disabilities among Trinidadian Households

15:45-17:15 Session F

TP chair(s):

Marco Arlotti, Di Rosa and Martinelli

13a - Challenges to ageing in place: Potential risks of isolation and abandonment for frail older people living at home Ilaria Madama, Università degli studi di Milano, Franca Maino, Università degli studi di Milano; Federico Razetti, Università degli studi di Milano

Ageing in peripheral areas. Socially innovative practices to contrast the isolation of frail elderly people in Lombardy and Piedmont

Hsi-Wen Chang, Department of Indigenous Affairs and Development, National Dong Hwa University., Tai, Yu Chin / Department of Long Term Care, Mennonite Christian Hospital.

The Experiences and Challenges of Long-Term Care in Taiwan - A case of an indigenous community

Diane Burns, Sheffield University Management School & the Centre of International Research on Care, Labour and Equalities, University of Sheffield, UK, Cate Goodlad, Kate Hamblin, Karla Zimpel-Leal all the Centre of International Research on Care, Labour and Equalities, University of Sheffield, UK

Innovation in home care: The holy grail or new wine in old bottles?

Yvonne La Grouw, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam,

Dealing with loss in the past or in the future? Perspectives of older people and their care practitioners on managing ‘frailty’ while living at home

Outi Jolanki, Tampere University, Paula Vasara, University of Jyväskylä, Lina van Aerschot, University of Jyväskylä

Self-managed housing as a way to prepare for health problems and care needs in old age

WEDNESDAY JUNE 26TH

9:00-10:30 Session A

Symposia

Ito Peng & Shereen Hussein

The role of national policies in shaping migrant workers’ experience in providing home care for older people in Europe

1. Shereen Hussein, Professor of Care and Health Policy Evaluation, University of Kent, United Kingdom

‘A comparative analysis of the sustainability of migrant care workers in eight OECD countries’

2. Karen Christensen, Professor of Sociology, Bergen University, Norway

‘Contextualising decision processes of migrant care workers in social care – the case of Norway’

3. Hildegard Theobald, Professor of Organisational Gerontology, University of Vechta, Germany

‘Care workers in professional long-term care in Germany: The intersection of migration status and social class’

4. Mirko Di Rosa, Research Fellow, National Institute of Health and Science on Aging; INRCA, and Giovanni Lamura, Head of Centre for Socio-Economic Research on Ageing, INRCA, Italy

‘Migrant care workers in Italian households: recent trends and future perspect

9:00-10:30 Session B

TP chair(s):

Teresa Martin-Garcia

17a - Men, work and care in contemporary families

Nadiya Kelle, German Centre of Gerontology (DZA), Ulrike Ehrlich (DZA)

Male and female family caregivers in Germany: Who provides family care? Where? For whom? And how?

Yeonjin Kim, Lund University,

Adjusting Fatherhood Entitlement among Korean Fathers in Sweden: The Influence of Corporate Culture over the Institutional System

Wen-hui Anna Tang, National Sun Yat-sen University, TAIWAN (Visitng Scholare GSL, MIT, USA),

Transformation of Fathering in Contemporary Taiwan: Gender, Class and Social Policy

Bernhard Weicht, University of Innsbruck, Austria, Barbara da Roit (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy)

Changing patterns of men’s unpaid work during the economic crisis: a comparative fuzzy-set analysis

Zoheb Khan, Centre for Social Development in Africa, University of Johannesburg,

“I can do everything that she can do” – Constructions of masculinity and care among South African men receiving the Child Support Grant

Sol Scavino, Universidad de la República Oriental del Uruguay, Karina Batthyány

Paths to co-responsibility: men in child care in Uruguay.

9:00-10:30 Session C

Symposia

Kate O’Loughlin and Teppo Kröger

Combining work and care: Workplace support and its contribution to sustainable care arrangements

1. Kate Hamblin, Research Fellow in Sustainable Care, University of Sheffield, UK and Katja Knauthe, researcher and doctoral student, University of Applied Sciences Zittau-Görlitz, Germany

‘Progress and regression in the compatibility of care and work in the 21st century: an Anglo-German comparison’

2. Allison Williams, Professor & CIHR Research Chair, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada

‘Achieving a caregiver-friendly workplace standard for Canadian working carers: A partnership approach’

3. Shingou Ikeda, Vice-Senior Researcher, Japan Institute of Labor Policy and Training, Japan

‘Statutory care leave in Japan: policy changes, rationales and their consequences’

4. Li-Fang Liang, A/Professor, Institute of Health & Welfare Policy, National Yang-Ming University, Taiwan

‘Managing work and care without workplace support: does employing a live-in worker fill the gap? The example of Taiwan’

9:00-10:30 Session D

TP chair(s):

Michele Nelson

25a - Collaborating with Volunteers and NGOs to Transform Care: Valuing Unpaid Care Work

Kjersti Helene Haarr, VID Specialized University, Volunteering, everyday life and home dwelling older people

Ruta Kazlauskaite, ISM University of Management and Economics, Virginija Poskute, Irmina Matonyte, Lineta Ramoniene, ISM University of Management and Economics

NGOs and stakeholder cooperation in LTC organising and delivery: An equal player or a stranger?

Michelle Nelson, Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute and University of Toronto, Rachel Thombs, Univeristy of Toronto, Juliana Yi, University of Toronto, Janet Bettger, Duke University, Tine Rostgaard, VIVE

Volunteers and NGOs as Partners in Community Reintegration and Reablement Services

Yayoi Saito, Osaka University, ‘Co-producer’ or Passive Beneficiary? Findings from a Survey of Cooperative Health and Eldercare in Japan.

Inbar Livnat, The Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Dr. Michal Almog-Bar, The Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Trapped Between the Sticky Floor and the Glass Ceiling: The Employment of Women as Mid-Level Managers in Non-Profit Organizations

Kiran Modi, Founder Managing Trustee, Udayan Care, New Delhi, India,

Mentor Parents as Proponents of Social Change

9:00-10:30 Session E

TP chair(s):

Marco Arlotti, Di Rosa and Martinelli

13b - Challenges to ageing in place: Potential risks of isolation and abandonment for frail older people living at home

Matteo Luppi, INAPP, Marco Arlotti, Costanzo Ranci Quality of life and social isolation among frail oldest-old population in Europe

Assma Hajji, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Birgit Trukeschitz, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business; Julien Forder, University of Kent; Juliette Malley, London School of Economics and Political Science; Ismo Linnosmaa, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL)

The effects of home care services on quality of life outcomes in Austria, England and Finland

Katja Ilmarinen, National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland, Lina Van Aerschot, University of Jyväskylä, Finland

User fees of home care services pose a risk of poverty and care deprivation for older people with low income

Lennarth Johansson, Stockholm Gerontology Research Center,

Rethinking Ageing in Place – some Swedish experiences

9:00-10:30 Session F

TP chair(s):

Ingela Naumann

10a - Childcare, equality and wellbeing for all: Is it possible?

Olga Rojas, El Colegio de México, Mario Martínez Male participation in the care of children in Mexico. Differences between urban and rural areas

Antonia Scholz, Deutsches Jugendinstitut / German Youth Institute, Dana Harring, Britta Menzel, Deutsches Jugendinstitut

Pluralism as a result of priority-setting? A cross-country comparison of local childcare provision

Caitlyn Collins, Washington University in St. Louis, A Right or a Privilege? A Cross-National Interview Study of Mothers’ Perceptions of Work-Family Policy Supports

Ásta Berglind Willemsdóttir Verheul, Junior Researcher Tilburg University - Department of Sociology, E.C. M Berkers (PhD student Tilburg University - Department of Sociology) I.A. van Deurzen (Assistant professor Tilburg University - Department of Sociology) and S. Bekker (Associate professor Tilburg Law School - Department of Labour Law and Social Policy

Families in need of care at the intersection between labour market and wellbeing discourses

Ijin Hong, Institute for Welfare State Research (IWSR), Yonsei University, Hyejin Choi, Institute for Welfare State Research (IWSR), Yonsei University

How are Childcare Services Used According to Socioeconomic Status? A Comparison of the UK and South Korea

Olga Rojas, El Colegio de México, Mario Martínez Male participation in the care of children in Mexico. Differences between urban and rural areas