A challenge to the Danish welfare state: How international retirement migration and transnational health promotion clash with national policies.

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Standard

A challenge to the Danish welfare state : How international retirement migration and transnational health promotion clash with national policies. / Blaakilde, Anne Leonora.

I: Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences, 2013.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Blaakilde, AL 2013, 'A challenge to the Danish welfare state: How international retirement migration and transnational health promotion clash with national policies.', Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences. <http://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4196401>

APA

Blaakilde, A. L. (2013). A challenge to the Danish welfare state: How international retirement migration and transnational health promotion clash with national policies. Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences. http://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4196401

Vancouver

Blaakilde AL. A challenge to the Danish welfare state: How international retirement migration and transnational health promotion clash with national policies. Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences. 2013.

Author

Blaakilde, Anne Leonora. / A challenge to the Danish welfare state : How international retirement migration and transnational health promotion clash with national policies. I: Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences. 2013.

Bibtex

@article{9f7fe0a4ef574302b437a944cf169c1f,
title = "A challenge to the Danish welfare state: How international retirement migration and transnational health promotion clash with national policies.",
abstract = "The phenomena of mobility and migration are growing as more peoplemove and frequently change their residences – intra-nationally, transnationallyand internationally. Traditional conceptualisations of nation-stateborders used to be the contextual prerequisite for “citizenship”, but this iscurrently being challenged. National borders are no longer a comprehensiveconception that can be used to understand and manage “citizens”. Thesociologist John Urry coined this phenomenon “The post-societal agendaof the world”, because national borders are no longer natural borders (Urry2000). Another sociologist, Peggy Levitt, further suggests that migrationshould be studied as transnational social fields, and not as “natural containers”of delineated national social fields (Levitt 2007). In this chapter,the focus is on the consequences of Danish national migration policiesrelated to transnational social fields, which Danish retired migrants enterwhile moving to warmer climates in Southern Europe",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Retirement Migration, Mobility, Welfare state, later life, Aging",
author = "Blaakilde, {Anne Leonora}",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
journal = "Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences",
issn = "2001-7529",
publisher = "Samlignsnummer f{\"o}r enstaka enskilt utgivna arbeteb",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A challenge to the Danish welfare state

T2 - How international retirement migration and transnational health promotion clash with national policies.

AU - Blaakilde, Anne Leonora

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - The phenomena of mobility and migration are growing as more peoplemove and frequently change their residences – intra-nationally, transnationallyand internationally. Traditional conceptualisations of nation-stateborders used to be the contextual prerequisite for “citizenship”, but this iscurrently being challenged. National borders are no longer a comprehensiveconception that can be used to understand and manage “citizens”. Thesociologist John Urry coined this phenomenon “The post-societal agendaof the world”, because national borders are no longer natural borders (Urry2000). Another sociologist, Peggy Levitt, further suggests that migrationshould be studied as transnational social fields, and not as “natural containers”of delineated national social fields (Levitt 2007). In this chapter,the focus is on the consequences of Danish national migration policiesrelated to transnational social fields, which Danish retired migrants enterwhile moving to warmer climates in Southern Europe

AB - The phenomena of mobility and migration are growing as more peoplemove and frequently change their residences – intra-nationally, transnationallyand internationally. Traditional conceptualisations of nation-stateborders used to be the contextual prerequisite for “citizenship”, but this iscurrently being challenged. National borders are no longer a comprehensiveconception that can be used to understand and manage “citizens”. Thesociologist John Urry coined this phenomenon “The post-societal agendaof the world”, because national borders are no longer natural borders (Urry2000). Another sociologist, Peggy Levitt, further suggests that migrationshould be studied as transnational social fields, and not as “natural containers”of delineated national social fields (Levitt 2007). In this chapter,the focus is on the consequences of Danish national migration policiesrelated to transnational social fields, which Danish retired migrants enterwhile moving to warmer climates in Southern Europe

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Retirement Migration, Mobility, Welfare state

KW - later life, Aging

M3 - Journal article

JO - Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences

JF - Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences

SN - 2001-7529

ER -

ID: 126808189