Beyond “Living Well”: Toward Socially Just Cultural Narratives About Living With Dementia
Janelle Taylor, Nancy Berlinger

TL;DR
This paper explores how society can create fair and enduring cultural stories about living with dementia and caregiving in an aging world.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of moral imagination to develop socially just narratives for dementia care in non-ideal conditions.
Findings
Cultural narratives can shape how societies support people with dementia and caregivers.
Moral imagination is essential for creating just and sustainable approaches to dementia care.
These narratives must be used by those in power to drive real-world change.
Abstract
This paper considers how cultural narratives function when an aging society is reflecting on itself and what it wants for fellow members of this society, specifically, people facing dementia and people who are dementia caregivers. It explores the moral imagination required to develop socially just cultural narratives for aging societies that will endure under non-ideal conditions. Moral imagination is the capacity to think about current and future challenges in ways that aim at better lives and greater justice. Socially just cultural narratives are the stories embedded in these tasks that convey ideas and values about how to support better lives for disadvantaged members of a society, alongside other important goals such as effectiveness and sustainability. When used and acted upon by those with the power to drive change, these narratives should help to produce opportunities for better…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEducation, Healthcare and Sociology Research · Ethics in medical practice · Aging and Gerontology Research
