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415 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. ix (1974)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0415 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

America is aging. The proportion of its population now over 65 years of
age-li percent-has almost tripled since 1900 and could grow to
almost 20 percent in the next century. The emergence of this stratum of
elderly is historically unprecedented. Demographically, falling birth rates
and rising life expectancy rates have produced societal aging only in a
handful of countries in the most advanced stages of industrialization.
Simultaneously, the social meanings of growing old-once an ambivalent
mix of neglect and resignation-are changing; retiree and senior citizen
are becoming new stages in the life cycle.
The political consequences of these dramatic shifts have been neither
widely noticed nor clearly analyzed. Societal aging has been, in fact, an
iceberg issue in the history of social policy. The tip has been known for
decades, but its deeper outlines and implications are only beginning to be
fathomed. Private citizens tend to think of aging as a personal fate rather
than as a public issue. Scholars originally concerned with aging-mostly
biologists and psychologists-have focused chiefly on microanalytic
factors. Politicians and others seeking legislation favorable to the elderly
present their case as nonpartisan and, therefore, nonpolitical. All who
are involved labor under a double burden of public disinterest: (1) the
generally negative value placed on any kind of obsolescence in a culture
obsessed with newness; (2) the often dry and technical nature of the
critical issues, such as income maintenance and health care organization.
As a result, analyses of macrolevel consequences of aging have been
sparse, scattered and usually written for specialists. This has been true
particularly in the area of public policy-where available information
becomes quickly outdated-and in political behavior-where unin-
formed generalization has flourished without empirical evidence. Edu-
cated lay people interested in the latter, for example, have had to rely on
often highly speculative popular predictions of the coming political
power of a senior citizenry.
The present volume of THE ANNALS is designed to make available to
the generalist the best and most current thinking on the topic. The
contributors-academicians with long experience in fields related to
aging and public policy, and practitioners conversant with the tech-
nicalities of law and administration-represent a cross-section of
ideologies and viewpoints. For the most part, their perspectives are long
range, attempting to situate and to analyze the issues in their broader,
historical context. Hopefully, the volume will stimulate wider public
awareness of, and informed debate over, the political consequences of
aging.
FREDERICK R. EISELE

ix

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