Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Developing the ‘Sociology of Ageing’ to tackle the challenge of ageing societies in Central and Eastern Europe
- I Perceptions of older persons
- Public perception of the elderly living in different ethnic societies in Bulgaria
- Image of the typical elderly Poles
- II Pension system and retirement
- III Migration and housing
- IV Sociology of healthy ageing and care
- V How to tackle the challenge of the sociology of ageing in CEE countries?
- Notes about contributors
Public perception of the elderly living in different ethnic societies in Bulgaria
from I - Perceptions of older persons
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Developing the ‘Sociology of Ageing’ to tackle the challenge of ageing societies in Central and Eastern Europe
- I Perceptions of older persons
- Public perception of the elderly living in different ethnic societies in Bulgaria
- Image of the typical elderly Poles
- II Pension system and retirement
- III Migration and housing
- IV Sociology of healthy ageing and care
- V How to tackle the challenge of the sociology of ageing in CEE countries?
- Notes about contributors
Summary
Introduction
Bulgarian population is characterized by its multi-ethnical composition. There are three main ethnic groups in this country: Bulgarian (more than 80% of the total population); Turkish (about 10%), and Roma (Gipsy) (about 5%). The age structure of the three main ethnic groups in Bulgaria is quite different, due to differences in the levels of fertility (highest in the Roma population and lowest in the Bulgarian ethnic group) and mortality (also highest in the Roma population and lowest in the Bulgarian ethnic group). The Roma population is the youngest, and the Bulgarian population is the oldest, the Turkish population lies in-between.
The position and the role of old people in a family and in the society are quite different in the three ethnic groups. In the Roma and in the Turkish populations old males are clearly heads of their families and there is a clear hierarchy by sex and age – the oldest are usually the highest in this hierarchy. Extended families are predominant. Even in cases where nuclear families exist as separate households, they coordinate their values and their behavior to the oldest members of the extended family (Tomova 1995).
In the Bulgarian ethnic group nuclear families are largely predominant, and old people often live in separated dwellings. Thus they become vulnerable to health problems, social institutions communication problems, as well as financial problems. Sometimes they become victims of various forms of aggression.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Developing the Sociology of AgeingTo Tackle the Challenge of Ageing Societies in Central and Eastern Europe, pp. 15 - 34Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2012