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Residential mobility and housing strategies in later life

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2008

Anthony M. Warnes
Affiliation:
Age Concern Institute of Gerontology, King's College London, Cornwall House Annexe, Waterloo Road, London SEI 8TX

Abstract

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Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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References

NOTES

1 For the growth of travelling around the United States by retirees in recreational vehicles (RVs), see Phillips, Judith, Peripatetic residences. Ageing and Society, 12, 4, (1992) 515518Google Scholar. Studies of seasonal migration were recently reviewed by Longino, Charles F. and Marshall, Victor, North American research on seasonal migration, Ageing and Society, 10, 2, (1990), 229–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2 For such findings see Sullivan, Deborah A., The ties that bind: differentials between seasonal and permanent migrants to retirement communities. Research on Aging, 7, 2, (1985), 235260.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

3 Studies of attitudes to and the conversion of housing equity have been stimulated in England by the over-inflation of house prices during the middle 1980s. Representative studies are: Hamnett, Christopher R., Harmer, Michael and Williams, Peter, Safe as Houses: Housing Inheritance in Britain. Paul Chapman, London, 1991Google Scholar; and Mackintosh, Sheila, Means, Robin and Leather, Philip, Housing in Later Life: The Housing Finance Implications of an Ageing Society. School for Advanced Urban Studies, Bristol, 1990.Google Scholar

4 Litwak, Eugene and Longino, Charles F., Migration patterns among the elderly: a developmental perspective. The Gerontologist, 27, (1987), 266–72CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed. See also Meyer, Judith W. and Speare, Alden, Distinctive elderly mobility: types and determinants. Economic Geography, 61, 1 (1985), 7988CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed. A previous report of the present analysis is: Jackson, D. J., Longino, C. F., Zimmerman, R. S. and Bradsher, J. E., Environmental adjustments to declining functional ability. Research on Aging, 13, 3. (1991). 289309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 See for example the analyses of the United Kingdom OPCS Longitudinal Study by Grundy, Emily, Retirement migration and its consequences in England and Wales, Ageing and Society, 7, 1, (1987), 5782CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Grundy, E., Demographic change, household evolution and housing needs. In Stillwell, John and Scholten, Henck J. (eds), Contemporary Research in Population Geography: A Comparison of The Netherlands and the United Kingdom, Kluwer, Dordrecht, Netherlands, 1989, pp. 148–52Google Scholar; and Harrop, Anne and Grundy, E., Geographic variations in moves into institutions among the elderly in England and Wales. Urban Studies, 28, 1, (1991), 6586.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

6 Law, Christopher M. and Warnes, A. M., The characteristics of retired migrants. In Herbert, David T. and Johnston, Ronald J. (eds), Geography and the Urban Environment: Volume III, Wiley, Chichester, 1980, pp. 175222.Google Scholar

7 Warnes, A. M., Temporal and spatial patterns of elderly migration. In Stillwell, John, Rees, Philip H. and Boden, Peter (eds), Migration Processes and Patterns: Volume II, Population Redistribution in the 1980s, Belhaven, London, 1992, pp. 248–70.Google Scholar

8 This research deserves more notice in north America. There are reports in English: Cribier, Françoise, Aspects of retirement migration from Paris. In Warnes, A. M. (ed.) Geographical Perspectives on the Elderly, Wiley, Chichester, Sussex, 1982, pp. 111137Google Scholar; Cribier, F., Change in the life course and retirement: the example of two cohorts of Parisians. In Johnson, Paul, Conrad, Christoph and Thomson, David (eds), Workers versus Pensioners, Manchester University Press, Manchester, 1989, pp. 181201.Google Scholar