"I like to get out to be energized by different people": An exploratory analysis of mobility and wellbeing in later life.
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Publication date
2011
Authors
Ziegler, F.
Schwanen, T.
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Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2011
Abstract
This paper adds to the growing number of studies about mobility and wellbeing
in later life. It proposes a broader understanding of mobility than movement
through physical space. Drawing on the ‘mobility turn’ in the social sciences, we
conceptualise mobility as the overcoming of any type of distance between a here
and a there, which can be situated in physical, electronic, social, psychological or
other kinds of space. Using qualitative data from 128 older people in County
Durham, England, we suggest that mobility and wellbeing influence each other in
many different ways. Our analysis extends previous research in various ways.
First, it shows that mobility of the self – a mental disposition of openness and
willingness to connect with the world – is a crucial driver of the relation between
mobility and wellbeing. Second, while loss of mobility as physical movement can
and often does affect older people’s sense of wellbeing adversely, this is not
necessarily so; other mobilities can at least to some extent compensate for the loss
of mobility in physical space. Finally, wellbeing is also enhanced through mobility
as movement in physical space because the latter enables independence or
subjectively experienced autonomy, as well as inter-dependence in the sense of
relatively equal and reciprocal social relations with other people.
Keywords
mobilities, wellbeing, qualitative methods, County Durham (UK)