Abstract

AbstractElder law is often approached in terms of a ‘body’ of law. In this article, I argue for a contextualised and externalised perspective on the ageing individual as the subject of elder law. Elder law relates to the implications of law as an institutionalisation of society seen through the lens of older persons. The aged subject is a contested and differentiated social construct to be studied in relation to an externalised social ‘problem’ and properly contextualised. Whereas the ageing individual in the context of labour law and anti-discrimination regulation turns out to be remarkably young, the specific history of LGBT persons in society comes to the fore in cases where age intersects with a ground such as sexual orientation. The ‘ageing’ worker must thus be understood in relation to work as the dominant distributive order in society, and in relation to institutions and developments associated with work. Due to the role of age as a traditional social stratifier, the prohibition against age discrimination has been given a weaker format than have prohibitions against other kinds of discrimination, and the ban on ageism has failed to achieve a clear legal status. Deficiencies in the measures taken against age discrimination are also evident in their incapacity to address situations where age intersects with other grounds, resulting in a compartmentalised application and interpretation of discrimination bans, leaving vulnerable sub-groups without protection. In sum, elder law is very much a field in process and – although arguing for the added value of a contextualised perspective – it may for the time being suffice to say that ‘elder law is what elder law researchers do’.

Highlights

  • Elder law as a separate legal discipline first emerged in the United States of America (USA), and as a mainly practice-oriented approach to the older person’s legal needs (Doron, 2009a; Frolik 1993, 2002)

  • Ageing & Society 517 decades, elder law is still often approached in terms of new bodies of law, special laws or even ‘a body’ of law

  • Elder law relates to the implications of law as an institutionalisation of society seen through the lens of the older person, irrespective of which societal area is in question – just as the ‘woman’, the ‘elderly person’ or the ‘ageing individual’ is not a unified category or object of study, but rather a contested and differentiated social construct (Fudge, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Elder law as a separate legal discipline first emerged in the United States of America (USA), and as a mainly practice-oriented approach to the older person’s legal needs (Doron, 2009a; Frolik 1993, 2002). The continued need for collectively imposed norms regarding the role of work in a person’s lifecycle, as perceived in the European setting (Suk, 2012: 75), is reflected in two features of the Employment Equality Directive: (a) it does not cover provisions on retirement age in public pension schemes; and (b) it grants an exemption – in Article 6(2) – for ‘the fixing for occupational social security schemes of ages for admission or entitlement to retirement or invalidity benefits’ (which are well within the realm of labour law proper).

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