Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T10:32:02.013Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘You really do become invisible’: examining older adults’ right to the city in the United Kingdom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2021

Deborah Menezes*
Affiliation:
The Urban Institute (TUI), Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK
Ryan Woolrych
Affiliation:
The Urban Institute (TUI), Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK
Judith Sixsmith
Affiliation:
School of Nursing and Health Science, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK
Meiko Makita
Affiliation:
Edinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (ESALA), University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
Harry Smith
Affiliation:
The Urban Institute (TUI), Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK
Jenny Fisher
Affiliation:
Department of Social Care and Social Work, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK
Soledad Garcia-Ferrari
Affiliation:
Edinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (ESALA), University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
Rebecca Lawthom
Affiliation:
Edinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (ESALA), University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
James Henderson
Affiliation:
The Urban Institute (TUI), Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK
Michael Murray
Affiliation:
Keele University, Department of Psychology, Keele, UK
*
*Corresponding author. Email: debbiemenezes@gmail.com
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

A global ageing population presents opportunities and challenges to designing urban environments that support ageing in place. The World Health Organization's Global Age-Friendly Cities movement has identified the need to develop communities that optimise health, participation and security in order to enhance quality of life as people age. Ensuring that age-friendly urban environments create the conditions for active ageing requires cities and communities to support older adults’ rights to access and move around the city (‘appropriation’) and for them to be actively involved in the transformation (‘making and remaking’) of the city. These opportunities raise important questions: What are older adults’ everyday experiences in exercising their rights to the city? What are the challenges and opportunities in supporting a rights to the city approach? How can the delivery of age-friendly cities support rights to the city for older adults? This paper aims to respond to these questions by examining the lived experiences of older adults across three cities and nine neighbourhoods in the United Kingdom. Drawing on 104 semi-structured interviews with older adults between the ages of 51 and 94, the discussion centres on the themes of: right to use urban space; respect and visibility; and the right to participate in planning and decision-making. These themes are illustrated as areas in which older adults’ rights to access and shape urban environments need to be addressed, along with recommendations for age-friendly cities that support a rights-based approach.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Across the globe, urbanisation and ageing represent two critical societal challenges driving key policy decisions (Phillipson, Reference Phillipson, Angel, Jacqueline and Richard2011; Fitzgerald and Caro, Reference Fitzgerald and Caro2017). In the development of sustainable cities and communities, there has been a focus on place-making, specifically how urban spaces and inner-city areas can enable a sense of inclusion and citizenship for all residents (Friedmann, Reference Friedmann2010). In bringing about urban change, debate has centred on how urban environments can support equitability in terms of providing diverse groups with access to resources and opportunities to support wellbeing (Wheeler, Reference Wheeler2013). This discussion has been firmly grounded in theories of social justice and rights to the city (Imrie, Reference Imrie, Bezmez, Sinan and Senturk2011) which have conceptualised those rights in two interrelated ways: the right to appropriate the city (e.g. right to access, occupy and use urban space) in support of a full social participation, and the right to participate in the shaping of the city (e.g. citizenship, involvement in decision-making) to enable political participation (Lefebvre, [1968] Reference Lefebvre and Kofman E1996, Reference Lefebvre and Nicholson-Smith1974; Purcell, Reference Purcell2002, Reference Purcell2003). Whilst the rights to the city agenda has gained much attention, there has been little attempt to conceptualise these rights within the context of ageing in urban environments. This is despite literature exploring rights and social justice amongst older adults more broadly, including calls for an international response to addressing the rights of older adults (Tang and Lee, Reference Tang and Lee2006).

Towards a rights-based agenda for age-friendly cities

Enabling a ‘right to the city’ agenda is seen as fundamental to citizenship, democratic participation and engagement, specifically by having the right to engage in the opportunities that cities offer (Lefebvre, [1968] Reference Lefebvre and Kofman E1996, Reference Lefebvre and Nicholson-Smith1974; Purcell, Reference Purcell2002, Reference Purcell2003). In so doing, the ‘right to the city’ movement has aimed to strengthen the ability of citadins (i.e. inhabitants of the city) to take charge of processes of spatial production (Lefebvre, [1968] Reference Lefebvre and Kofman E1996, Reference Lefebvre and Nicholson-Smith1974; Shields, Reference Shields1998; Dikeç, Reference Dikeç2002; Purcell, Reference Purcell2002, Reference Purcell2003; Chiodelli, Reference Chiodelli2013). Appropriating urban spaces and resources, in respect of moving around the city and accessing urban space, are a key dimension of what Lefebvre ([1968] Reference Lefebvre and Kofman E1996) referred to as a reclaiming of oeuvre: the ability to participate in the city and to be part of urban life and to be present within it (Mitchell and Heynen, Reference Mitchell and Heynen2009; King, Reference King, Meagher, Noll and Biehl2020). The ‘right to the city’ supports the claim of all (including older adults) to social participation and inclusion, and the opportunities to access the ‘rich’ social, economic, political, cultural and physical spaces that constitute urban life (Cramm et al., Reference Cramm, Van Dijk and Nieboer2018; Woolrych et al., Reference Woolrych, Sixsmith, Fisher, Makita, Lawthom and Murray2021).

The ‘right to the city’ movement has regained the attention of scholars searching for a more inclusive and participatory framework to address the growing disenfranchisement of urban inhabitants in the context of contemporary neoliberal policy making (Friedman, Reference Friedmann1995; Isin, Reference Isin and Isin2000; McCann, Reference McCann2002, Reference McCann2003; Purcell, Reference Purcell2002, Reference Purcell2003; Mitchell, Reference Mitchell2003; Simone, Reference Simone2005; Harvey, Reference Harvey2008; Boniburini et al., Reference Boniburini, Le Marie, Moretto and Smith2013; Torku et al., Reference Torku, Chan and Yung2021). In this paper, we use ‘right to the city’ as a theoretical framework to engage with the age-friendly cities (AFC) agenda which affirms full citizenship when seeking: (a) to flourish through a rich social participation by appropriation of urban spaces; and (b) to participate in urban governance and generate social change, i.e. a rich formal and informal political participation.

Alongside a ‘rights to the city’ agenda, the literature on ageing in the city has focused on the engagement and participation of older adults through ensuring access to the services and supports to enable ageing-in-place (Rowles and Bernard, Reference Rowles, Bernard, Rowles and Bernard2013; Novek and Menec, Reference Novek and Menec2014; Woolrych et al., Reference Woolrych, Sixsmith, Fisher, Makita, Lawthom and Murray2021). Here, ageing-in-place is dependent on older adults having the place-based supports for social participation, mobility and active living (Sixsmith et al., Reference Sixsmith, Sixsmith, Fänge, Naumann, Kucsera, Tomsone, Haak, Dahlin-Ivanoff and Woolrych2014). However, the design of urban environments often discourages active ageing, putting older adults at risk of insecurity, isolation and loneliness (Scharf and Smith, Reference Scharf and Smith2005; Buffel et al., Reference Buffel, Phillipson and Scharf2012; Adlakha et al., Reference Adlakha, Krishna, Woolrych and Ellis2020). Enabling older adults to participate in communities in old age is fundamental to a sense of fulfilment, engagement and citizenship; underpinning principles of social justice within the city (Woolrych et al., Reference Woolrych, Sixsmith, Fisher, Makita, Lawthom and Murray2021).

Over the last 20 years, there has been a growing interest in developing AFCs in policy and practice as a key driver for ageing in place (Buffel et al., Reference Buffel, McGarry, Phillipson, De Donder, Dury, De Witte, Smetcoren and Verté2014; Buffel and Phillipson, Reference Buffel and Phillipson2016; Woolrych and Sixsmith, Reference Woolrych and Sixsmith2017; Torku et al., Reference Torku, Chan and Yung2021). Much of this work has been led by the World Health Organization's (WHO) Global Age-friendly Cities agenda (WHO, 2007) aimed at supporting the development of urban environments that provide the economic, personal, physical and social resources to age well. The increasing interest in AFCs has been underpinned by a paradigm shift in public discourse on ageing as a positive process, emphasising the active roles and positive contribution of older adults to communities and society (Biggs, Reference Biggs2001; Powell and Edwards, Reference Powell and Edwards2002; Lui et al., Reference Lui, Everingham, Warburton, Cuthill and Bartlett2009). This has forefronted the importance of a ‘rights-based’ approach that prioritises the inclusion of older adults in policy making at a community and city level (WHO, 2002; Woolrych and Sixsmith, Reference Woolrych and Sixsmith2017).

The AFC agenda has led to some positive interventions in the co-design of physical and social environments to support old age, as well as models of participatory, collaborative governance that include older adults in decision-making and planning (Lui et al., Reference Lui, Everingham, Warburton, Cuthill and Bartlett2009; Menec et al., Reference Menec, Means, Keating, Parkhurst and Eales2011; Cramm et al., Reference Cramm, Van Dijk and Nieboer2018). However, forms of participation have not always been inclusive, having more success engaging with the ‘enthusiastic’ older adults at the expense of those who are often more isolated, such as the ‘very old’, those living with dementia and the physically frail (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Smith and Wang2006; Menec et al., Reference Menec, Means, Keating, Parkhurst and Eales2011; Buffel et al., Reference Buffel, Phillipson and Scharf2012; Buffel and Phillipson, Reference Buffel and Phillipson2016).

Barriers to exercising rights to the city undermine a sense of agency in old age, and thwart older adult's ability to assume more active roles in communities (Woolrych and Sixsmith, Reference Woolrych and Sixsmith2017). Here, feelings of inclusion are related to the extent to which urban environments affect a sense of being respected, valued and safe as key components of citizenship and the AFC (Abbott and Sapsford, Reference Abbott and Sapsford2005; Scharf et al., Reference Scharf, Phillipson, Smith, Wahl, Tesch-Romer, Hoff and Hendricks2007; De Donder et al., Reference De Donder, Buffel, Dury, De Witte and Verte2013; Menezes, Reference Menezes, Brosius and Mandok2020; Woolrych et al., Reference Woolrych, Duvurru, Portella, Sixsmith, Menezes, Fisher, Lawthom, Reddy, Datta, Chakravarty and Khan2020). Research has highlighted the importance of connected communities that support meaningful participation, which in turn enhance feelings of place belonging, familiarity and identity (Phillips et al., Reference Phillips, Siu, Yeh, Cheng, Gavin and Phillips2005; Buffel et al., Reference Buffel, McGarry, Phillipson, De Donder, Dury, De Witte, Smetcoren and Verté2014; Novec and Menec, Reference Novek and Menec2014; Woolrych and Sixsmith, Reference Woolrych and Sixsmith2017). Yet urban interventions often undermine a sense of place, failing to build the political, social and cultural capital necessary for sustainable communities (Woolrych et al., Reference Woolrych, Sixsmith and Kagan2007). This has significantly impacted on older adults, for instance, through processes of urban change that have displaced many from urban areas, disrupting deeply rooted neighbourhood ties and the affective, symbolic and psychological attachments to community (Atkinson et al., Reference Atkinson, Wulff, Reynolds and Spinney2011).

In contemporary debates on city design, the lived experiences of older adults have been afforded less significance than commercial interests and the related ‘rebranding’ of the city, thus prioritising the experiences of certain groups over others, bringing issues of tolerance, fairness and justice into sharp focus (Burns et al., Reference Burns, Lavoie and Rose2012). As a result, older adults have often reported a sense of disillusion with living in inner-city urban areas, with many experiencing a sense of ‘lost community’ and estrangement from place (Buffel et al., Reference Buffel, Phillipson and Scharf2013).

Positioning older adults ‘right to the city’

Delivering equitable and inclusive outcomes for older people raises critical questions of how fairness, social justice and good governance can be supported within the delivery of AFCs. In this context, the ‘right to city’ approach offers a valuable theoretical perspective to support dialogue and analysis of the barriers to ageing well, namely appropriation and use of urban spaces, and participation in decision-making at various political scales in the production of urban space and access to resources.

In seeking to assert the ‘right to the city’ as both appropriation and political participation, this article brings together the experiences of older adults living across urban environments in the United Kingdom (UK) by drawing on qualitative interview data collected from nine neighbourhoods across three cities in the UK (Glasgow, Edinburgh and Manchester). The paper outlines recommendations for supporting ageing-in-place which seek to build a deepening understanding of older adults’ aspirations for social and political participation – the ‘right to the city’ and work towards developing a rights-based approach to AFCs with older people at the centre.

Methodology

The analysis for this paper is based on qualitative data collected as part of a three-year (2016–2019) mixed-method case-study project examining experiences of ageing-in-place, specifically exploring the enablers and barriers to creating AFCs. The project methods included a survey, semi-structured interviews, walking interviews and photo diaries. This paper draws on data from 104 semi-structured face-to-face interviews undertaken with 110 older adults, including six couples (between the ages of 51 and 94, who were all interviewed only once) from nine neighbourhoods across three cities in the UK (Manchester, Glasgow and Edinburgh). The selected case-study cities and neighbourhoods were chosen to represent a broad diversity of contexts in terms of urban development, ageing demographics, and social and economic deprivation. The recruitment strategy adopted multiple pathways to reach older adults, including canvassing in the local community, utilising mailing lists of existing community groups, follow-up contact provided through completion of an initial door-to-door survey and snowball sampling from an initial set of interviewees. Initially, the inclusion criteria for participating in the study were: aged 60 and over and residing within the case-study neighbourhoods. In very few exceptions we were approached by participants in their fifties who were actively engaged with local groups of older adults and so we lowered the inclusion criteria to ensure their perspectives were incorporated. In ensuring an inclusive approach to engagement, the sample also included older adults with physical impairments and mild cognitive impairment (people with dementia and their carers) (see Table 1).

Table 1. Sample of participant characteristics

Notes: N = 110. 1. Cannot be calculated as many values are missing. na: data not available. BAME: Black, Asian and Minority Ethnicities.

The research was subject to the lead university's ethical review process and research governance framework. Participants were informed about the goals of the study and how issues of confidentiality and anonymity would be preserved, including the storage, analysis and dissemination of the data. The interviews were audio recorded, professionally transcribed and checked for quality by the research team.

The interview schedule was developed following a pilot study and the final schedule covered the following topic areas: experiences of ageing and sense of place; perceptions of the built and social environment, particularly in terms of the barriers and challenges to ageing in the community; experiences of social and civic participation in the city/community; and priorities for delivering AFCs. Interview length ranged between 25 and 150 minutes and followed a conversational style, with the schedule acting as a guide. Participants were given the choice of interview venue to ensure their comfort and convenience. Consequently, most interviews were conducted in older adults’ homes, but community venues were also used.

The thematic analysis of the data is underpinned by an interpretive paradigm (see Creswell, Reference Creswell2009) which requires a holistic exploration of both individual and social phenomena in order to understand older adults’ lived experiences within their immediate neighbourhoods. The analysis followed the basic six steps outlined by Braun and Clarke (Reference Braun and Clarke2006). It began by repeatedly reading the interview transcripts to get familiarised with the nuances of the data. This was followed by identification of meaningful texts in relation to the research questions. The relevant data were then grouped in first coding categories. These codes were then discussed amongst the investigators to develop a coding framework. This framework was then refined through further referring to the transcripts and discussing the interconnections of the emerging codes and interpretations of the data. In this way, a series of tentative themes were formed, and codes were combined or removed to develop the final themes. A team analysis workshop was then undertaken with all investigators to cluster the codes into a final agreed set of themes and sub-themes. The result was a case-study analytical framework which entailed the development of the key themes across the nine neighbourhoods: ‘place familiarity and perceptions of safety and security’, ‘vulnerability and public space’, ‘navigating supports’, ‘social and civic participation’, ‘feeling valued’, ‘managing place insecurities’ and ‘older adults’ rights and voice’.

The focus of this paper lies on the two main issues around rights of older adults in the city: (a) the right to shape, appropriate and use urban space, and (b) the right to participate in the decision-making of the city. This is done by examining older adults’ everyday experiences to underline those aspects of their everyday life which are constituted around daily encounters within the city and their neighbourhoods, followed by identifying the experiences and ‘struggles’ that older adults confront while navigating their everyday urban spaces, to then move on to illustrating the voice that older adults have in the decisions that direct their everyday ‘right to the city’.

Right to shape, appropriate and use urban space

This section draws on the experiences of older adults to illustrate the challenges and struggles that many older adults face in accessing and participating in urban life and spaces – the right to access the city. The focus is on two specific sub-themes: right to access and use urban space, and respect and visibility.

Right to access and use urban space

Issues around the right to space in terms of accessing, using and appropriating urban space were recurrent themes in the interviews. A perceived fundamental human right for a number of older adults was barrier-free access to public spaces and moving around the community, in order to access the ‘basic freedoms’ that people should be entitled to in old age:

To me, an age-friendly community is one where I can move around without hassle, without worry. How can I get from A to Z and access the basic freedoms that most others are entitled. It shouldn't be a source of worry and stress. (Female, 82, Manchester)

Some older adults, who were mobile and active, expressed positive experiences of public space and transport, as an enabler of mobility, physical activity and socialising, thereby enabling people to ‘stay involved’ as a key component of an age-friendly community:

Transport is very good. The bus is every few minutes. Yeah it's all free. We just get on and off wherever we want to be. It's easy for me as I can reach the places I need to be … I can still stay involved. I often get to the Botanical Gardens on the bus where I'll have lunch with friends. (Female, 84, Edinburgh)

Yet accessing participation opportunities was complex for many older adults extending beyond accessible public transport, requiring the continuous negotiation of barriers within the urban environment. Physical barriers and hazards to mobility prevented the ability to move around urban space easily which undermined everyday routines within the context of place, providing ‘second-class’ access for many and eroding opportunities for community participation:

There are hazards now. They didn't used to be but they changed all the road haven't they and everything. They have made the pavement that bit smaller … Yes and now they have got a cycle path. Well yes because I mean they use our space … you find yourself taking different routes, avoiding certain places or not going out. (Female, 71, Manchester)

To others, exercising one's right to the city was strongly related to the right to the various supports and services within the community. Inability to navigate urban space prevented access to those services, and compromised opportunities for healthy and active ageing:

It doesn't matter how easy it is to get to a place or to the end of the road, if we cannot get there, then we cannot access that service or meet people can we? In which case, those opportunities that should be afforded to you, are no longer available. So you do feel excluded. (Male, 81, Edinburgh)

For some older adults, the ability to assume access to urban space and take advantage of assets in the community went beyond physical access. Being able to realise an individual ‘right to the city’ was also deeply rooted in psycho-social barriers associated with leaving the home:

Assuming that I know what is out there for me in terms of the things I can access, and even if I could physically get there… there are other things preventing me from getting out there if you know what I mean… I've not always had the same confidence since the fall. It's the anxiety of leaving the home that gets to me. (Female, 71, Glasgow)

These everyday struggles for older adults reflect the importance of the right to access and use urban space, in terms of supporting basic opportunities and freedoms. Many felt a lack of confidence about using urban space and of their rights in occupying that space. Whilst even those communities who were notionally more age-friendly in terms of being ‘asset rich’ were unlikely to deliver positive outcomes for older people unless those opportunities could be realised.

Respect and visibility

For older adults in our study, an AFC was one where older adults felt safe and respected as key components of the ‘right to the city’. Despite some of the enablers that public transport offered, many older adults felt vulnerable when using public transport owing to a lack of sensitivity from transport providers and a lack of recognition from other users. In this respect, travelling by bus was often an ‘anxious’ experience for older adults, with everyday journeys being framed as a ‘struggle’:

A lot of people are nervous about falling on a bus, getting on and off the buses. The bus drivers are getting much better at being aware but there are some bus drivers who are just not nice people. It's almost like they like to play games. Like as soon as you get on the bus, as far as I know the training says … that with older people or disabled people they've got to wait until they are seated before they take off. (Female, 80, Manchester)

These ‘struggles’ were also present in determining rights and priorities in terms of appropriating urban space. Older adults felt that their rights to use urban space were afforded less priority than others, creating feelings of frustration, and excluding them from the use of everyday spaces in the community. Some spoke of wanting to assert themselves with others – although this was not always well-received:

They [members of the public] have got no respect for people … I don't let it bother me. I was out with [my son] one day and he said, ‘Mum, behave yourself.’ ‘Why? I have as much right to be on this pavement as they have.’ I once said there was a car parked across the pavement and I was coming up here and I said to the driver, ‘this is a pavement for people’. So that meant I had to walk on to the main road which is a bus lane which is hardly the safest thing to do. (Female, 72, Manchester)

There was a perception of very little respect from other members of the community when using public space, which translated into negative experiences when undertaking daily activities outside the home, including shopping:

…there's very little respect anywhere. When my husband was in the mobility thing [scooter] in the Trafford Centre [shopping precinct], people used to try and walk over him. When I was walking down the road from the hospital the other day and I had two bags, a bag in each hand, I had to push my way through the crowds and then I got along this part of the road and they're milling in and out and everywhere. (Female, 67, Manchester)

Many older adults reported that becoming older had rendered them invisible to other community members, adopting separate, parallel lives with little day-to-day recognition when moving around public spaces:

I've noticed in the last maybe what, certainly the last few years. I'm just 65 now, but you become invisible. You really do … there can be big numbers of people maybe, they've just got off a bus or something. And you can be walking the opposite way on the pavement, and they don't see you, honestly. I can get on a bus, you really do become invisible, honestly. (Female, 65, Manchester)

Similarly, there was an increased sense of vulnerability and sustaining their voice in the community was becoming more challenging. Often, older adults felt as if their perspectives were less likely to be heard, with many being apprehensive about defending their right to occupy the city, thus undermining their sense of citizenship:

When you're older you're more vulnerable. I'm finding I'm losing that bravery, if you like. You feel more vulnerable as you're getting older and I can feel it now more. It's a terrible world, isn't it! Because my daughter used to always be saying to me, don't say anything and I won't shut up, but I'm finding now I'm less likely to say something. I don't know whether it's because it's getting worse now or whether it's just because I'm getting older. (Female, 67, Manchester)

Some adopted measures to remain ‘visible’ within urban spaces, but these had the potential to objectify and/or stigmatise the older person:

A lady in the community now has had to buy herself a high-vis vest to cross the road because she's terrified that the traffic won't see her. It is stigmatising, isn't it? She's not said anything about that no, but that's my perception of it. And buses tend to not stop for her either if they don't see her. So that's why she does it as well. (Female, 65, Manchester)

The examples above illustrated three types of barriers that interviewees raised in relation to their opportunities to develop their full participation – and assert and enjoy their ‘right to the city’: constraints on accessing resources and urban spaces; perceptions of lack of respect and understanding towards them as older adults; and a sense of social invisibility. In the process, these examples provide further insights as to the challenges for older adults in reclaiming their ‘right to the city’.

Right to participate in planning and decision-making

The previous section illustrated how accessing and using the city is an everyday struggle for many older adults in the UK. These struggles would suggest the importance of involving older adults in the planning and decision-making around urban interventions. In this section, we interpret some of the challenges older adults face in seeking to become part of urban governance – making and remaking the city.

A small number of older adults had participated in specific groups (e.g. cultural champions, valuing older people groups, advisory panels) to bring about change. These brought about positive experiences for older people, particularly where their voice was used in positive ways:

I've been a cultural champion for a few years now. There's that sense of responsibility but also feeling that you can make a difference. We disseminate information, get older people involved, encourage participation. It's the feeling that what you are doing has value. (Male, 75, Manchester)

However, the majority of older adults in our research reported feeling a lack of power in designing the communities and cities within which they live and an alienation from existing governance structures. Their voices were often not used meaningfully within the planning and design process, such that older people often felt devalued and under-prioritised:

We were asked about what we wanted to see as part of age-friendly Glasgow, when it all first started. They invited to a big event and they did a survey at the door. But we didn't hear anything after that … They're going to do what they want to do, aren't they? They might say we need your opinion but they do what they want. They'll see you but they're not really listening to you. (Female, 64, Glasgow)

We had the City for All Ages stuff. We were just getting some momentum and then they decided to pull it. There was no real commitment and it all fell a bit flat. It's a shame but other things became a priority. I understand that it's not just older people competing for the services and the money and other groups might have been seen as more important. (Female, 80, Edinburgh)

Further, interviewees pointed out problems in getting heard within urban governance structures, the sense of historical and cultural ignorance to the requirements of communities, and a perception that the views and contributions of older adults are being exploited. There was a perceived ‘don't make a fuss’ attitude towards older people which pointed to a deeper exclusion of older people from the policy setting:

Older people, and they also hate to make a fuss. They've been taught all their lives never to make a fuss. And councils exploit that. The people that make policy exploit that. (Male, 74, Glasgow)

A number of older adults saw the potential for a deepening engagement and deliberation with varieties of formal participation and governance yet there was often a reluctance or fear in doing so. A perception that older people ‘should be thankful for what they've got’ was part of a wider disavowal of older people's rights to influence change:

These are people with experiences in these problems. And there's plenty of us that are maybe older, they're not frail up there and there are plenty of people with loads of life experience that can deliver that kind of thing, rather than as I say some wee council committee that's been set up to produce some kind of report saying we're going to do this and that, we've identified this and that. There is a kind of apathy or a fear or a reluctance to raise their head above the parapet in case they're shot down in flames, and you've got to be thankful for what you've got and you can't expect any more as an older person. (Female, 66, Glasgow)

However, there were key differences across cities in terms of older people's perceptions of how their rights were being supported within an age-friendly context. In Manchester, a number of our interviewees were aware of the age-friendly movement in the city, one which has been well documented in the literature (McGarry and Morris, Reference McGarry and Morris2011). Many felt that this movement had not only created the political framework for deeper engagement with older people but mechanisms in practice for shaping change:

We have a Charter for older adult rights. It sets out how older people should be included in key decisions. That's a great start for any city. We also have a dedicated group of older people who input into each and every decision. So if it's a new transport initiative, then we input into it and help shape it. (Male, 82, Manchester)

Yet, across all case-study cities, ensuring the integration of older people's perspectives was not always achieved. Many felt that older adults had a positive contribution to make to the design and delivery of AFC, and that they should be seen as a crucial resource for deepening governance within communities:

But I think older people should be responsible or should have a big input, because you don't know what it's like to be an old person until you're an older person, until you have to encounter the kind of problems that we've been talking about this morning. (Male, 72, Glasgow)

In this sense, initiatives aimed at deeper engagement with older people ‘by older people themselves’ had the potential for positive impact in terms of wider participation but also in terms of understanding and realising rights to the city:

We have the cultural champions, which are basically older people in communities who have a direct line into the council but who engage other older adults in social participation and civic forms of engagement. We act as a conduit into the community for programmes and services … People will approach you about this and that. How do I do this? How might I do that? Am I entitled to this? So people gain wider understanding from that. (Male, 82, Manchester)

Yet in achieving meaningful change, understanding and recognition of the rights within the age-friendly agenda was a complex process. Interventions often had more success with certain visible and engaged members of the population. Achieving real transformative change in the lives of the harder-to-reach, marginalised and vulnerable older groups was difficult to achieve:

We are a complex community here. It's easier to engage those who answer the door and the same people who are always involved when people come asking. But there are sub-groups and different identities within the community. What about those older people who are not represented, whether they are isolated and don't leave the house. The differences between a person from Somalia, India or Pakistan. How do we really understand what they want? And how they can get involved? (Male, 82, Manchester)

Moreover, there was an identified need to challenge existing structures of power to ensure that older people are in a position to influence change. This included the ability to shape decision-making processes actively but also about realising the collective power of older adults:

People need more power, older people need more power, and there is a power there, it's just about organising that and ensuring that people, old people should have a voice, but it should be a strong voice. (Male, 70, Glasgow)

In making a positive contribution, there was a recognition from some interviewees of the crucial role of older adult's organisations in building wider knowledge of these opportunities, supporting wider participation and empowerment, and actively advocating for and monitoring change:

More needs to be done on educating people into understanding that they can make change. They can make changes, they can influence changes. But they have to have the platform to speak. (Female, 72, Manchester)

If there aren't groups, if there aren't groups that advocate and pressure groups for change, then there should be. We've got a very tiny one here, a very tiny one, but there needs to be more for older people to actually have their say and have their say conveyed to affect policy, to talk about any of the things we've discussed this morning. (Male, 80, Glasgow)

A central challenge highlighted was the need for the state to support older adults actively in understanding their existing rights and opportunities for democratic participation:

Generally, people are very unaware and therefore ignorant of their rights. And a lot of acts are passed and somebody looks at that and it means absolutely nothing to them. And unless it's spelled out and this is what's been happening, and this is what you can do. So the majority of people are not aware of the power, of having any power. (Female, 72, Glasgow)

These interviewees were looking for a more powerful collective body of older adults to advocate change and for a very different relationship with urban planning systems (spatial, social, health, local, for instance). In effect, not just through ‘having a say’ within state structures but through shared power to effect policy and practice change.

Conclusion: in search of the right to the age-friendly city

Cities are often perceived as hubs of economic, social and cultural activity, as well as sites of innovation, creativity and change. For many, city-space is constructed through social relations, a place where social engagement and everyday interactions play out and where people negotiate access to services, activities and institutions as they move around the city. The city has the potential to act as a space for inclusion and participation, yet it can also be excluding and disempowering by generating invisibility and barriers to access and opportunities to participate in decision-making. Some groups, including older adults, are more sensitive to urban changes as they typically rely on their more immediate communities and urban spaces for access to services, resources and support; therefore, an inclusive access to urban settings and environments are crucial for supporting healthy and active ageing agendas as part of the AFC framework.

Key findings

Results drawn from this research have showed how older adults’ ‘right to the city’ is denied on two interrelated accounts: use of the city and wider social participation; and political participation in the formal decision-making of the city. Within the first category, urban spaces confronted older adults with hazards and barriers that make the built environment inconvenient, uncomfortable or unsafe. These spaces were seen by older adults as disabling and excluding, compromising social participation and alienating many from the spaces of everyday life. Secondly, pertaining to issues of social justice in the context of formal political participation, older adults highlighted the broader power imbalances – such as designing for and not with older adults – with older adults often absent from planning processes or where their views were ignored. This left older adults feeling invisible and voiceless in the process. These experiences were often underpinned by a desire for recognition; to be valued as someone who is making a positive contribution to their city and community. Their means to making positive contributions were undermined by a lack of collective power and awareness amongst older adults about what their ‘rights’ were and by the failures of existing structures in supporting those rights.

This paper thus illustrates the multi-layered, interconnected nature of older adults’ everyday use of urban spaces, and participation in designing these, particularly by highlighting the extent to which older adults’ ‘right to the city’ is being denied. These denials are expressed in older adults’ daily life across the nine neighbourhoods in Edinburgh, Manchester and Glasgow. This paper also illustrates how everyday denials of the ‘right to the city’ undermine the ability of older adults to assume a sense of citizenship, thus undermining a sense of self-in-the city. Arguably we have an obligation, articulated through the AFC model, to facilitate older adults’ social and political participation and so ultimately their right to full citizenship.

Recommendations

The challenges of delivering AFCs raise some pertinent issues about how to better support older adults’ right to full social and political participation. What follows are some specific interventions for policy and practice.

Right to appropriate and use urban space

The right to appropriate and use urban space is made complex by a set of interrelated psychological, social and spatial barriers. These barriers are particularly important to those older adults who have become more reliant upon their immediate environment for achieving fulfilment in old age and for whom accessing public space and moving around the neighbourhood and wider city is integral to accessing the range of services and supports they need. The experiences of the study participants highlight the interdependency between person and place, and also speak to the many tensions and conflicts they experience within urban spaces which undermine the relational aspects of place-making which are essential in supporting a sense of inclusion and citizenship through AFC interventions.

In order to address this, current age-friendly strategies are often underpinned by a distributive discourse of rights, e.g. if we allocate resources such as more physical infrastructure (e.g. improved outdoor spaces, community centres, health-care facilities and opportunities for social participation), then there follows an assumption that we are doing ‘right’ by older adults. Yet many older adults remain excluded from accessing those spaces, with our findings revealing negotiation of access to urban settings to be more nuanced, involving interrelated social and psychological factors (confidence, fear, insecurity, territoriality, etc.). Clearly the process of ‘claiming’ a ‘right to the city’ is more complex, requiring that older adults: (a) are involved in determining what those rights are; (b) are informed about what constitutes their ‘right to the city’; and (c) have the opportunity to assume their ‘right to the city’ which requires targeted supports for older adults.

In negotiating one's rights to the city, our findings revealed that experiences of older people cut across multiple contexts, e.g. home, community, outdoor spaces. These raise issues about how rights are being determined and co-ordinated across sectors, e.g. the right to housing, the right to move around the city, the right to access health and wellbeing services. Whilst some have been proactive in establishing Older People's Charters at a city level (Manchester City Council, 2015), there is a need to ensure these are fully operationalised in AFC delivery in terms of how these rights are being applied and evaluated in policy formulation and implementation of AFC initiatives.

Rights to participate and collective advocacy

Participants repeatedly stressed the wealth of experience and expertise that they were able to bring to cities, and also the strong desire to act as active ‘place makers’ in the process. Older adults expressed a degree of scepticism at current decision-making structures which failed to integrate their knowledge in the production of urban environments. In giving this knowledge less value, it effectively denies them power in the making and remaking of urban spaces that all city inhabitants would expect. This need for older adults to have their say conveyed to affect policy was a recurring theme in the data. A major reason for this was that older adults were not aware of their rights to participate in urban governance, as set out in UK legislation. Systemic ignorance of their views and the ‘do not make a fuss’ attitude of some policy makers was deeply disempowering of older adults and their capacities to contribute to decision-making.

Participants advocated change in the way urban planning is undertaken, not just through ‘having a say’ but through shared power to effect policy and practice change. A need for facilitating this voice and empowering older adults as ‘change makers’ or ‘change advocates’ would go some way to meeting their ‘right to the city’ through political participation. Arguably, the collective organising by older adults and suitable resourcing of such structures are also crucial to increasing their effective political participation.

Delivering political participation through the AFC agenda

Clearly having ‘a right’ is different to ‘doing right’. Whilst it is apparent that rights are negotiated in the social and relational production of space, they are also grounded in processes and practices of governance. Therefore, there must be the political will to agitate for and realise the rights of older adults in processes of participation, governance and decision-making. Further work is needed to explore these political dimensions. Even where a set of rights are established, older adults need to be in a position to assume control and ownership of rights. This is dependent on their being the structures and governance frameworks in place to affirm their rights both individually and collectively (e.g. representative groups). This work with older adults highlights the need to engage in a process of collaborative dialogue and knowledge exchange, to encourage a shift in thinking to a more inclusive and user-centred approach to urban interventions. Arguably the development and resourcing of collective organising and advocacy by and with older adults will have a crucial role here. Older People's Boards, Assemblies and Steering Groups which are accessible and meet regularly as consultative, sounding and delivery groups are examples for influencing age-friendliness in local council policies. However, these need to be extended further to ensure that the seldom heard and often excluded older adults feel more in control of influencing and delivering a rights-based agenda for AFC.

Ultimately, the right of older adults to participate in urban governance, as ‘city dwellers’ who have a key voice in defining urban spaces (Lefebvre, [1968] Reference Lefebvre and Kofman E1996, Reference Lefebvre and Nicholson-Smith1974; Purcell, Reference Purcell2003), requires new approaches in order to realise the AFC agenda. Young (Reference Young1989) highlighted how participatory democratic structures tend to reproduce group oppression, ‘the paradox of democracy’, and argues that it is by institutional means that this must be rectified. The experiences of older adults in this study point towards institutional strategies that draw on the depth of their knowledge to build a ‘wiser’ urban governance. Through deliberative approaches, perhaps, that seek to move beyond the paradox of participatory democracy towards more diverse, balanced dialogue and policy making. This requires more assertive collective organising and advocacy for and by older adults.

Future research agenda

Going beyond the present research, further work needs to be undertaken to explore clearly and further conceptualise what older adults understand by rights to the city across diverse groups and identities. This requires a more intersectional approach to understanding rights in old age, exploring how age cuts across ethnicity, gender, ability (physical and mental), sexuality and place to impact on rights, which we have not explored in this study. There is a current assumption in the delivery of social justice frameworks that there exists a set of normative judgements through which rights in old age can be determined, e.g. right to access public spaces, right to affordable housing, right to inclusion in the decision-making process. However, in applying a common framework, there is a failure to understand how the freedoms, capabilities and opportunities to assume those rights are restricted for more-marginalised and vulnerable groups in old age. As the Methodology section pointed out, cognitive or mobility abilities were not used as criterions for recruitment, however, the nature of the final sample reflected a more active set of older adults though many of them did live with varying levels of impairments. Hence, further research would also be required to ascertain the challenges that older adults with cognitive and physical decline faced in the process of accessing and participating in the life of the city. In terms of future opportunities for comparative case-study research, whilst the findings presented in this paper brought together the experiences of older people across cities and community contexts, we did not analyse the data by socio-economic context. Future research is needed to explore how experiences and rights in old age differ in terms of material access to resources and income, as well as across different urban governance frameworks. Finally, in light of global events, and the importance of COVID-19 and future pandemics, older adults face new challenges in respect of their freedoms and rights, potentially reshaping the role of the community and state, and this requires further discussion in the context of AFC.

Concluding remarks

Older adults are at risk of being denied their full ‘right to the city’ as an appropriation of the shared spaces and resources as part of a fulfilling social participation. Their experiences and perceptions of social invisibility illustrated the power increasingly to undermine and deny their aspirations for full social participation and inclusion as they become older. If involving older adults in the development of AFC approaches within urban settings represents a crucial goal for urban governance, then achieving this will require situating a rights-based approach within a governance framework that allows those rights to be realised. This is crucial if the age-friendly agenda is to achieve transformative change aimed at progressing social justice amongst older adults.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank all the participants of this study for their valuable contribution and time. We are also grateful to our two anonymous referees and the editor who provided helpful comments and suggestions to strengthen this paper.

Author contributions

All authors were involved in the discussions towards developing the manuscript and critically revised and edited subsequent versions of the manuscript, initially drafted by DM.

Financial support

This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) (grant number ES/N013220/1). The ESRC had no involvement in the study design, in the collection, analysis or interpretation of the data, nor in the decision to submit the article for publication.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Ethical standards

Ethical approval was obtained from Heriot-Watt University's Ethical Review Committee prior to undertaking the fieldwork and all participants provided consent.

References

Abbott, P and Sapsford, R (2005) Living on the margins: older people, place and social exclusion. Policy Studies 26, 2946.10.1080/01442870500041660CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adlakha, D, Krishna, M, Woolrych, R and Ellis, G (2020) Neighbourhood supports for active ageing in urban India. Psychology and Developing Societies 32, 254277.10.1177/0971333620937497CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atkinson, R, Wulff, M, Reynolds, M and Spinney, A (2011) Gentrification and displacement: the household impacts of neighbourhood change. AHURI Final Report No. 160, 1–89.Google Scholar
Biggs, S (2001) Toward critical narrativity: stories of ageing in contemporary social policy. Journal of Aging Studies 15, 303316.10.1016/S0890-4065(01)00025-1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boniburini, I, Le Marie, J, Moretto, L and Smith, H (2013) The City as a Common Good: Urban Planning and the Right to the City. Brussels: La Cambre Horte.Google Scholar
Braun, V and Clarke, V (2006) Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qualitative Research in Psychology 3, 77101.10.1191/1478088706qp063oaCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buffel, T and Phillipson, C (2016) Can global cities be ‘age-friendly cities’? Urban development and ageing populations. Cities 55, 94100.10.1016/j.cities.2016.03.016CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buffel, T, Phillipson, C and Scharf, T (2012) Ageing in urban environments: developing ‘age-friendly’ cities. Critical Social Policy 32, 597617.10.1177/0261018311430457CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buffel, T, Phillipson, C and Scharf, T (2013) Experiences of neighbourhood exclusion and inclusion among older people living in deprived inner-city areas in Belgium and England. Ageing & Society 33, 89109.10.1017/S0144686X12000542CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buffel, T, McGarry, P, Phillipson, C, De Donder, L, Dury, S, De Witte, N, Smetcoren, A-S and Verté, D (2014) Developing age-friendly cities: case studies from Brussels and Manchester and implications for policy and practice. Journal of Aging & Social Policy 26, 5272.10.1080/08959420.2014.855043CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burns, V, Lavoie, J-P and Rose, D (2012) Revisiting the role of neighbourhood change in social exclusion and inclusion of older people. Journal of Aging Research 2012, 148287.10.1155/2012/148287CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chiodelli, F (2013) Planning and urban citizenship: suggestions from the thoughts of Henri Lefebvre. Planning Perspectives 28, 487494.10.1080/02665433.2013.800717CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cramm, J, Van Dijk, H and Nieboer, A (2018) The creation of age-friendly environments is especially important to frail older people. Ageing & Society 38, 700720.10.1017/S0144686X16001240CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Creswell, JW (2009) Research Design: Qualitative, Quantitative and Mixed Methods Approaches, 3rd Edn. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
De Donder, L, Buffel, T, Dury, S, De Witte, N and Verte, D (2013) Perceptual quality of neighbourhood design and feelings of unsafety. Ageing & Society 33, 917937.10.1017/S0144686X12000207CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dikeç, M (2002) Police, politics, and the right to the city. GeoJournal 58, 9198.10.1023/B:GEJO.0000010828.40053.deCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fitzgerald, K and Caro, F (2017) International Perspectives on Age-friendly Cities. New York, NY: Routledge.10.4324/9781315866772CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedmann, J (1995) The right to the city. Society and Nature 1, 7184.Google Scholar
Friedmann, J (2010) Place and place-making in cities: a global perspective. Planning Theory & Practice 11, 149165.10.1080/14649351003759573CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harvey, D (2008) The right to the city. New Left Review 53, 2340.Google Scholar
Imrie, R (2011) Designing disabling environments. In Bezmez, SYD, Sinan, S and Senturk, S (eds), Sakatlik Calismalari: Soysal Bilimlerden Bakma. Istanbul: Koc University Press, pp. 325362.Google Scholar
Isin, E (2000) Democracy, citizenship and the city. In Isin, E (ed.), Democracy, Citizenship and the Global City. London: Routledge, pp. 121.Google Scholar
Jenkins, P, Smith, H and Wang, Y (2006) Planning and Housing in the Rapidly Urbanising World. London: Routledge.10.4324/9780203003992CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, L (2020) Henri Lefebvre and the right to the city. In Meagher, SM, Noll, S and Biehl, JS (eds), Philosophy of the City Handbook. New York, NY: Routledge, pp. 7686.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, H (1974) The production of space. In Nicholson-Smith, D (ed.), The Production of Space. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, pp. 289293.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, H ([1968] 1996) The right to the city. In Kofman E, E (ed.), Writings on Cities. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, pp. 61181.Google Scholar
Lui, C, Everingham, J, Warburton, J, Cuthill, M and Bartlett, H (2009) What makes a community age-friendly: a review of international literature. Australasian Journal on Ageing 28, 116121.10.1111/j.1741-6612.2009.00355.xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Manchester City Council (2015) Older People's Charter. Age-friendly Manchester. Manchester, UK: Manchester City Council.Google Scholar
McCann, E (2002) Space, citizenship, and the right to the city: a brief overview. GeoJournal 58, 7779.10.1023/B:GEJO.0000010826.75561.c0CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCann, E (2003) Framing space and time in the city: urban policy and the politics of spatial and temporal scale. Journal of Urban Affairs 25, 159178.10.1111/1467-9906.t01-1-00004CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGarry, P and Morris, J (2011) A great place to grow older: a case study of how Manchester is developing an age-friendly city. Working with Older People 15, 3846.10.5042/wwop.2011.0119CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menec, V, Means, R, Keating, N, Parkhurst, G and Eales, J (2011) Conceptualizing age-friendly communities. Canadian Journal on Aging/La revue canadienne du vieillissement 30, 479493.10.1017/S0714980811000237CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Menezes, D (2020) ‘They cannot boss me around’: manifesting agency in care homes in Goa, India. In Brosius, C and Mandok, R (eds), Caring for Old Age: Perspectives from South Asia. Heidelberg, Germany: Heidelberg University Publishing, pp. 159180.Google Scholar
Mitchell, D (2003) The Right to the City: Social Justice and the Fight for Public Space. New York, NY: Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Mitchell, D and Heynen, N (2009) The geography of survival and the right to the city: speculations on surveillance, legal innovation, and the criminalization of intervention. Urban Geography 30, 611632.10.2747/0272-3638.30.6.611CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Novek, S and Menec, V (2014) Older adults’ perceptions of age-friendly communities in Canada: a photovoice study. Ageing & Society 34, 10521072.10.1017/S0144686X1200150XCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, D, Siu, O, Yeh, A and Cheng, K (2005) Ageing and place: perspectives, policy, practice. In Gavin, J and Phillips, D (eds), Ageing and Place: Perspectives, Policy, Practice. London: Routledge, pp. 147163.Google Scholar
Phillipson, C (2011) Developing age-friendly communities: new approaches to growing old in urban environments. In Angel, S, Jacqueline, L and Richard, A (eds), Handbook of Sociology of Aging. New York, NY: Springer, pp. 279293.10.1007/978-1-4419-7374-0_18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powell, J and Edwards, M (2002) Policy narratives of aging: the right way, the third way or the wrong way? Electronic Journal of Sociology 6, 19.Google Scholar
Purcell, M (2002) Excavating Lefebvre: the right to the city and its urban politics of the inhabitant. GeoJournal 58, 99108.10.1023/B:GEJO.0000010829.62237.8fCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Purcell, M (2003) Citizenship and the right to the global city: reimagining the capitalist world order. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 27, 564590.10.1111/1468-2427.00467CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rowles, G and Bernard, M (2013) The meaning and significance of place in old age. In Rowles, G and Bernard, M (eds), Environmental Gerontology: Making Meaningful Places in Old Age. New York, NY: Springer, pp. 324.Google Scholar
Scharf, T and Smith, A (2005) Multiple Exclusion and Quality of Life Amongst Excluded Older People in Disadvantaged Neighbourhoods. London: Social Exclusion Unit, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister.Google Scholar
Scharf, T, Phillipson, C and Smith, A (2007) Aging in a difficult place: assessing the impact of urban deprivation on older people. In Wahl, H-W, Tesch-Romer, C, Hoff, A and Hendricks, J (eds), New Dynamics in Old Age: Individual, Environmental and Societal Perspectives. New York, NY: Routledge, pp. 153173.Google Scholar
Shields, R (1998) Lefebvre, Love, and Struggle: Spatial Dialectics. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Simone, A (2005) The right to the city. Interventions 7, 321325.10.1080/13698010500268189CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sixsmith, J, Sixsmith, A, Fänge, M, Naumann, D, Kucsera, C, Tomsone, S, Haak, M, Dahlin-Ivanoff, S and Woolrych, R (2014) Healthy ageing and home: the perspectives of very old people in five European countries. Social Science & Medicine 106, 19.10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.01.006CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tang, K and Lee, J (2006) Global social justice for older people: the case for an international convention on the rights of older people. British Journal of Social Work 36, 11351150.10.1093/bjsw/bch395CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Torku, A, Chan, A and Yung, E (2021) Age-friendly cities and communities: a review and future directions. Ageing & Society 41, 22422279.10.1017/S0144686X20000239CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wheeler, S (2013) Planning for Sustainability: Creating Liveable, Equitable and Ecological Communities. Abingdon, UK: Routledge.10.4324/9780203134559CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woolrych, R and Sixsmith, J (2017) Ageing and urbanisation: how can we support the rights of older people to age-in-place? SURF Magazine, Summer/Autumn.Google Scholar
Woolrych, R, Sixsmith, J and Kagan, C (2007) The Impact of Regeneration on the Well-being of Local Residents: The Case of East Manchester. Manchester, UK: Research Institute for Health and Social Change, Manchester Metropolitan University.Google Scholar
Woolrych, R, Duvurru, J, Portella, A, Sixsmith, J, Menezes, D, Fisher, J, Lawthom, R, Reddy, S, Datta, A, Chakravarty, I and Khan, A (2020) Ageing in urban neighbourhoods: exploring place insideness amongst older adults in India, Brazil and the United Kingdom. Psychology and Developing Societies 32, 201223.10.1177/0971333620937106CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woolrych, R, Sixsmith, J, Fisher, J, Makita, M, Lawthom, R and Murray, M (2021) Constructing and negotiating social participation in old age: experiences of older adults living in urban environments in the United Kingdom. Ageing & Society 41, 13981420.10.1017/S0144686X19001569CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Health Organization (WHO) (2002) Active Ageing: A Policy Framework. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (WHO) (2007) Global Age-friendly Cities: A Guide. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
Young, I (1989) Polity and group difference: a critique of the ideal of universal citizenship. Ethics 99, 250274.10.1086/293065CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Sample of participant characteristics