Overview
- Authors:
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Philip Selby
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World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
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Mal Schechter
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National Institute on Aging, USA
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United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
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Table of contents (24 chapters)
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Overall summary
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 15-24
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Core Issue from Round One
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Round One (replies by topic)
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 53-60
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 61-68
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 69-82
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 83-92
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 93-100
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 101-107
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 108-113
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 114-120
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 121-126
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 127-133
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 134-142
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 143-147
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Round Two
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Front Matter
Pages 149-151
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- Philip Selby, Mal Schechter, United Nations Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs
Pages 152-156
About this book
For age is opportunity no less Than youth itself, though in another dress, And as the evening twilight fades away The sky is filled with stars, invisible by day. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Morituri Salutamus We live in a society that remorselessly casts off those who are too weak, mentally or physically, to cling to the dizzy wheel of existence - a society that worships the idols of beauty, youth, and wealth whilst ruthlessly rejecting those who fall outside its narrow standards of acceptability, or exploitability. The elderly are the latest victims of an artificial life-style that tends to create artificial problems. In this respect, we have much to learn from those primitive communities that continue to revere their elders for the wisdom they have acquired in the school of life, and which have yet to make the dubious progression to a civilization that dismisses its senior members as senile old fools or a burden on taxpayers' funds. It is vital to warn developing countries of the dangers of duplicating the errors of the industrial world - of which they see only the superficial trappings that mask the iceberg of disillusionment beneath.
Authors and Affiliations
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World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
Philip Selby
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National Institute on Aging, USA
Mal Schechter