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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231019T130000
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DTSTAMP:20260421T232431
CREATED:20231013T174135Z
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UID:46558-1697720400-1697724000@socialwork.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Increasing commodification of life's time? Subjective life expectancy and intention to retire in two Danish cohorts
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Institute for Life Course & Aging’s 2023-2024 Seminar Series \n\nIN PERSON: Room 422\, 246 Bloor St. West\nONLINE: Click here to view the event on October 19\, from 1:00 to 2:00pm via zoom \n\nAbout the lecture\nThis talk will explore the idea of increasing commodification of time and how that may change people’s experience and perception of time in life. Using data from the Danish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (years 2012 and 2017)\, Dr. Siren will present an empirical analysis of the association between subjective life expectancy and people’s intention to retire in two Danish cohorts (born in 1960 and 1965). The analysis shows that the association between subjective life expectancy and intention to retire has intensified over time (i.e. from the one cohort to another)\, and a decomposition analysis confirms that people’s estimate of their personal time left now explains a larger proportion of intended retirement behavior than before. \nAbout the featured speaker\nAnu Siren is Professor and Chair of Gerontology at Tampere University\, Finland. Her research interests are related to the institutional\, cultural and material contexts of late life and the way these interact with the individual experience of ageing. Her research deals with various social gerontological topics\, including senior co-housing\, digitalization of services in ageing society\, the role of family relations in late life\, and the needs and preferences of future older adults. She is currently interested in exploring the perceptions and lived experiences of time\, and the ways in which the societal and individual perceptions of time shape the lives of older adults. Since earning her Ph.D. in 2005 in Finland\, Anu worked for 15 years in Denmark\, and among other things was responsible for managing the Danish Longitudinal Survey of Ageing (collected since 1997)\, until joining Tampere University as Professor of Gerontology in spring 2021.
URL:https://socialwork.utoronto.ca/event/increasing-commodification-of-lifes-time-subjective-life-expectancy-and-intention-to-retire-in-two-danish-cohorts/
LOCATION:FIFSW Room 422\, 246 Bloor St\, Toronto\, ON\, M5S 1V4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Public
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231019T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231019T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T232431
CREATED:20230918T195150Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231013T201740Z
UID:45910-1697742000-1697747400@socialwork.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Janis Rotman Distinguished Lecture Series On Mental Wellness: Lessons Learned From Holocaust Survivors
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a talk on mental wellness by Dr. Paula David entitled “Lessons Learned From Holocaust Survivors: Antisemitism\, intergenerational trauma\, and caring for survivors of oppression\, genocide\, and extreme trauma in a post-Holocaust world.” \nWhen: Thursday\, October 19th | 7:00pm – 8:30pm\nWhere: Online via Zoom webinar. A zoom webinar link will be sent to all registrants in advance of the event. \n> Register here\n\nAbout this event:\nThe Janis Rotman Distinguished Lecture Series On Mental Wellness presents an annual keynote address by a leading researcher\, practitioner or educator on topics such as innovations in culturally-attuned mental health services\, social work’s role in addressing widening mental health disparities\, the impact of community-based care\, and other contemporary concerns at the intersection of social work and mental health. \nWe’d like to thank Janis Rotman for her generous support of FIFSW’s Talk It Out Online Counselling Clinic\, which inspired the launch of this series. \nSpeaker Bio: \nDr. Paula David (MSW\, PhD) has enjoyed a long career working with aging Holocaust Survivors\, their families and survivors of subsequent genocides. Based on both her fieldwork and research\, she now shares her experience and unique trauma-informed approaches with students of all ages\, teachers\, health professionals\, isolated families\, various trauma and genocide survivors\, First Nations families and those who care for them. Her many publications on caring for aging survivors and their caregivers have been translated into several languages and they continue to inform professional practice today. \nA graduate of FIFSW’s MSW and PhD programs\, Paula has been active in the social work profession for almost five decades. After retiring from the Baycrest Centre\, she then began her second career as an educator at the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work\, teaching full time across the Faculty’s Master of Social Work program for four years until retiring again. Paula is currently a frequent guest lecturer\, consultant and curriculum developer on the topic of caring for aging Holocaust survivors\, and those who have survived subsequent wars\, genocide and extreme trauma. Most recently she has been involved in cross-cultural post-memory creative initiatives that integrate her rich experience in the areas of mental health and trauma.  \nAbout the Talk:\nThere is a critical need to develop culturally-attuned mental health care that is responsive to the diverse needs and lived experiences of Jewish people\, their families and communities. At the same time\, trauma-informed care is becoming increasingly common and necessary practice for many communities and individuals in today’s world. \nHolocaust survivors\, in sharing their personal testimonies\, have left us a legacy of insight and understanding that can inform approaches to mental health practice — not only for the Jewish community\, but all communities who experience racialized\, ethnic and religious oppression. \nThis presentation will explore how our understanding of intergenerational trauma\, post-traumatic stress disorders\, and care for survivors of genocide and extreme trauma has evolved in our post-Holocaust world. The talk will also discuss the effects of antisemitism both past and present\, and its pervasive and growing presence in contemporary times. \n> Register here\nRecording:\nA recording will be shared with all newsletter subscribers after the lecture. If you aren’t already a subscriber\, please subscribe to FIFSW’s newsletter here. 
URL:https://socialwork.utoronto.ca/event/janis-rotman-distinguished-lecture-series-on-mental-wellness-lessons-learned-from-holocaust-survivors/
LOCATION:via Zoom
CATEGORIES:Public
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