Living with Your Own Kind at the End of Life:
(2015) SANM03 20151Social Anthropology
- Abstract
- This thesis is about the global trend of the profiling of nursing homes, with specific focus on two empirical cases of profiled nursing homes in Sweden and Denmark. The profiled nursing homes, and their social dynamics, are analyzed on the basis of data collected through ethnographic fieldwork and additional documentation. The profiled nursing homes are institutional attempts to satisfy what are believed to be the elderly’s individual or cultural ‘needs’ with the application of a specific profile. Behind this concept of satisfying cultural ‘needs’ lie two distinct categorical approaches which I call ‘enclave-thinking’ or ‘individuality-thinking’. The thesis highlights the increasing segmentation of the nursing home sector into different... (More)
- This thesis is about the global trend of the profiling of nursing homes, with specific focus on two empirical cases of profiled nursing homes in Sweden and Denmark. The profiled nursing homes, and their social dynamics, are analyzed on the basis of data collected through ethnographic fieldwork and additional documentation. The profiled nursing homes are institutional attempts to satisfy what are believed to be the elderly’s individual or cultural ‘needs’ with the application of a specific profile. Behind this concept of satisfying cultural ‘needs’ lie two distinct categorical approaches which I call ‘enclave-thinking’ or ‘individuality-thinking’. The thesis highlights the increasing segmentation of the nursing home sector into different client groups, as a result of profiling. Nursing homes must now make decisions about how to brand themselves and the target groups to which they want to appeal. Profiled nursing homes are just the latest incarnation of a general trend towards using the concept of ‘culture’ and ‘individuality’, often advertised as either ‘inclusion’ or ‘special needs’ in administrative restructuring and rebranding. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/7862318
- author
- Munch Larsen, Nanna LU
- supervisor
- organization
- alternative title
- An Ethnographic Study of Profiled Nursing Homes in Denmark and Sweden
- course
- SANM03 20151
- year
- 2015
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- needs, culture, profiling, nursing home, social anthropology
- language
- English
- id
- 7862318
- date added to LUP
- 2015-09-10 08:13:56
- date last changed
- 2015-09-10 08:13:56
@misc{7862318, abstract = {{This thesis is about the global trend of the profiling of nursing homes, with specific focus on two empirical cases of profiled nursing homes in Sweden and Denmark. The profiled nursing homes, and their social dynamics, are analyzed on the basis of data collected through ethnographic fieldwork and additional documentation. The profiled nursing homes are institutional attempts to satisfy what are believed to be the elderly’s individual or cultural ‘needs’ with the application of a specific profile. Behind this concept of satisfying cultural ‘needs’ lie two distinct categorical approaches which I call ‘enclave-thinking’ or ‘individuality-thinking’. The thesis highlights the increasing segmentation of the nursing home sector into different client groups, as a result of profiling. Nursing homes must now make decisions about how to brand themselves and the target groups to which they want to appeal. Profiled nursing homes are just the latest incarnation of a general trend towards using the concept of ‘culture’ and ‘individuality’, often advertised as either ‘inclusion’ or ‘special needs’ in administrative restructuring and rebranding.}}, author = {{Munch Larsen, Nanna}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Living with Your Own Kind at the End of Life:}}, year = {{2015}}, }