Rural ageing in the United Kingdom 2009-2012

DOI

This collection includes qualitative and quantitative datasets from the Grey and Pleasant Land project, funded under the RCUK's New Dynamics of Ageing programme interdisciplinary research initiative. These data were collected to address the principal project research questions: (1) how and in what ways are older people connected to civic society in rural settings in England and Wales? (2)what is the impact of this connectivity on older people’s quality of life in rural areas? and (3) how is later life experienced across diverse rural contexts and within subgroups of older people? This archived collection comprises data from older people aged 60 and over in six project study sites (from 3 rural place types each [accessible, less accessible, remote and inaccessible] in southwest England and Wales). These include a face-to-face survey of 922 respondents and a supplementary telephone survey with a sub-sample of 419 (Workpackage 1); 68 oral histories focused on leisure over the lifecourse collected in one study site only (North Cornwall) (Workpackage 2); 54 qualitative interviews with older respondents focused on transport and mobility (Workpackage 3); 29 qualitative interviews with older respondents focused on welfare and well-being in rural areas (Workpackage 5); 5 qualitative interviews with policy actors on older people in the study locations in southwest England and Wales (Workpackage 5); threads from the research team's online discussion forum focused on interdisciplinary approaches to investigating rural ageing (Workpackage 7).The impact of population ageing in rural areas is relatively under-researched in the UK. The aim of this interdisciplinary research programme is to investigate the circumstances, experiences and quality of life impact of older people's inclusion ('connectivity') in rural civic society. The research employs a mixed methods framework of quantitative and qualitative methods and perspectives from the arts and humanities, transport studies, the social and geographic sciences and informatics to characterise key aspects of older people's connectivities (ie, cultural, spatial, social, economic and technological) in rural community life and the role which these links play in facilitating civic engagement. The research is being carried out in six case study areas in South West England and Wales and addresses the following principal questions: (1) How and in what ways are older people connected to civic society in these rural settings? (2) What is the impact of this connectivity on older people's quality of life in rural areas? (3) How is later life experienced across diverse rural contexts and within subgroups of older people? (4) How can novel interdisciplinary approaches be used to capture and disseminate evidence about older people's participation in and contributions to rural civic society, ie, as a source of rural community capital?

All older person respondents were aged 60 and over. The survey sample of 922 in Workpackage 1 was selected from a register of households for the study areas with at least one member of the household aged 60 and over. The telephone survey of 419 persons in Workpackage 1 used a randomly chosen subsample of the larger WP1 survey sample. The oral histories in Workpackage 2 included 31 members of the survey sample with the remainder comprised of purposive and convenience samples of older adults in the study area (North Cornwall); The qualitative interviews with in Workpackage 3 were with 54 respondents randomly selected from the Workpackage 1 survey sample. The qualitative interviews with 29 respondents in Workpackage 5 were with respondents purposively selected from the Workpackage 1 survey sample to include all rural place types. The qualitative interviews with policy actors in Workpackage 5 were selected to include respondents from community authorities in each rural place type. The threads from the research team online discussion forum in Workpackage 7 were collected throughout the project on the electronic forum.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-853264
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=a80c92a643e04d8f19855a2844db497bf69744e84f3d959af622f2acac5b9685
Provenance
Creator Hennessy, C, University of Stirling
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2018
Funding Reference Economic and Social Research Council
Rights Catherine Hennessy, University of Stirling; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Numeric; Text
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage England and Wales; United Kingdom