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ageing & society volume 34 part 4 april 2014 ageing & society & S ISSN 0144-686x use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X14000105 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 65.21.228.167, on 09 Jan 2022 at 08:15:55, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of

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ageing & society

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C ON T E N T S

Cambridge Journals OnlineFor further information about this journal please go to the journal website at:journals.cambridge.org/aso

MIXPaper from

responsible sources®

®

ISSN 0144-686x

Articles547 BEATRIZ RODRÍGUEZ-MARTÍN, MARÍA MARTÍNEZ-ANDRÉS,

BEATRIZ CERVERA-MONTEAGUDO, BLANCA NOTARIO-PACHECO andVICENTE MARTÍNEZ-VIZCAÍNO: Preconceptions about institutionalizationat public nursing homes in Spain: views of residents and family members

569 JOHN GOODWIN and HENRIETTA O’CONNOR: Notions of fantasy and reality in the adjustment to retirement

590 MICHAEL ANNEAR, SALLY KEELING, TIM WILKINSON, GRANT CUSHMAN, BOB GIDLOW and HEATHER HOPKINS:Environmental influences on healthy and active ageing: a systematic review

623 RUTH BARTLETT: The emergent modes of dementia activism645 KATHLEEN LANE, FIONA POLAND, SHEILA FLEMING, NIGEL LAMBERT,

HILARY MACDONALD, JOHN POTTER, MONIQUE RAATS, PAULA SKIDMORE, CAROL VINCE, AMANDER WELLINGS and LEE HOOPER: Older women’s reduced contact with food in the ChangesAround Food Experience (CAFE) study: choices, adaptations and dynamism

670 CATRINA DENVIR, NIGEL J. BALMER and PASCOE PLEASENCE: Portal orpot hole? Exploring how older people use the ‘information superhighway’ foradvice relating to problems with a legal dimension

700 MÅRTEN LAGERGREN, BRITT-MARIE SJÖLUND, CECILIA FAGERSTRÖM,JOHAN BERGLUND, LAURA FRATIGLIONI, EVA NORDELL, ANDERS WIMO and SÖLVE ELMSTÅHL: Horizontal and vertical target efficiency – a comparison between users and non-users of public long-termcare in Sweden

Reviews720 ANDREW E. SCHARLACH and KAZUMI HOSHINO (eds): Healthy Aging in

Sociocultural Context (Jennifer Baird)722 GRAHAM ROWLES and MIRIAM BERNARD (eds): Environmental

Gerontology: Making Meaningful Places in Old Age (Andrew Clark)723 SUSAN A. MCDANIEL and ZACHARY ZIMMER (eds): Global Ageing in the

Twenty-first Century: Challenges, Opportunities and Implications (Hal Kendig)

use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X14000105Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 65.21.228.167, on 09 Jan 2022 at 08:15:55, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of

Instructions for contributorsAll papers must be submitted using Manuscript Central through the journal’s website at:journals.cambridge.org/aso.All books for review should be sent to: Stella Allinson, Review Editors’ Assistant, Ageing & Society,Faculty of Health and Social Care, The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA, UK.

Submission requirementsSubmission of an article is taken to imply that it has not been published elsewhere. Authors will berequired to confirm on submission of their article that the manuscript has been submitted solely to thisjournal and is not published, in press, or submitted elsewhere.Papers with more than one author must designate a corresponding author. The corresponding authormust confirm that co-authors have read the paper and agree to its submission.The corresponding author should prepare (a) a complete text and (b) complete text minus the title page, acknowledgements, and any running headers of author names, to allow blinded review. Where the paper reports original research on human subjects, confirmation must be given that ethicalguidelines have been met, including adherence to the legal requirements of the study country. Authorsmust state the full name of the body providing the favourable ethical review and reference number.A declaration of sources of funding must be provided if appropriate. Authors must specify what role, if any, their financial sponsors played in the design, execution, analysis and interpretation of data, orwriting of the study.Contributors of articles or reviews accepted for publication will be asked to assign copyright, on certainconditions, to Cambridge University Press. The Publisher reserves the right to typeset material by conventional means.

Preparation of manuscriptsAuthors are requested to bear in mind the multi-disciplinary and international readership of the journalwhen writing their contribution. Care must be taken to draw out the implications of the analysis for readers in other fields, other countries, and other disciplines.The stereotypical presentation of individuals or social groupings, including the use of ageist language,must be avoided.Articles must be between 3,000 and 9,000 words (excluding the abstract and references). All contributions (including reviews) should be typed double-spaced with at least one-inch or two centimetre margins throughout (including notes and the list of references).Most research articles usually have the following sections in sequence: Title page, Abstract (200-300words), Keywords (three to eight), Main text, Statement of ethical approval as appropriate, Statement offunding, Declaration of contribution of authors, Statement of conflict of interest, Acknowledgements,Notes, References, Correspondence address for lead author. The tables and figures should be presentedone to a page in sequence at the end of the paper.The title page should give the title of the article and the author(s)’ names, affiliations and postal andemail addresses.Authors are asked to follow the current style conventions as closely as possible. Please consult a veryrecent issue of the journal and download the full instructions for contributors from the journal’s website: journals.cambridge.org/aso.

Proofs and offprintsProofs will be sent to the corresponding author as a PDF via email for final proof reading. The proofsshould be checked and any corrections returned within 2 days of receipt. The publisher reserves the rightto charge authors for excessive correction of non-typographical errors.Authors will receive a PDF of the published paper and a copy of the journal, to go to the correspondingauthor. If offprints are required, these must be purchased at proof stage.

AG E I N G & S O C I E T YThe Journal of the Centre for Policy on Ageing and the British Society of Gerontology

Editorial BoardJill Manthorpe (Chair) King’s College LondonKate Bennett, University of Liverpool, UKGillian Crosby Centre for Policy on Ageing,London

Cathrine Degnen Newcastle University

International Editorial AdvisersIsabella Aboderin University of OxfordAndrew Achenbaum University of Houston, USAHiroko Akiyama University of Tokyo, JapanLars Andersson University of Linköping, SwedenRicca Edmondson National University of Ireland, Galway

Jenny de Jong Gierveld Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute

Anne Marie Guillemard University of Paris VHal Kendig University of Sydney, Australia

Ageing & Society is an interdisciplinary and international journal devoted to the understanding ofhuman ageing and later life, and the experiences and circumstances of older people in their social and cultural contexts. It draws contributions and has readers from many academic social science disciplines, and from clinical medicine and the humanities. In addition to original articles, Ageing & Society publishes book reviews, occasional review articles and special issues.

Subscriptions: Ageing & Society (ISSN 0144–686X) is published in volumes of ten parts inJanuary, February, March, April, May, July, August, September, October and November. The subscrip-tion price (excluding VAT) of volume 34, 2014, which includes print and electronic access, is £409.00(US$ 727.00 in USA, Canada and Mexico) for institutions; £73.00 (US$ 126.00 in USA, Canada andMexico) for individuals ordering direct from the Press and certifying that the journal is for theirpersonal use. The electronic-only price available to institutional subscribers is £335.00 (US$ 573.00 inUSA, Canada and Mexico). Print copies of single parts cost £45.00 net (US$ 77.00 in USA, Canadaand Mexico) plus postage. EU subscribers (outside the UK) who are not registered for VAT should addVAT at their country’s rate. VAT registered subscribers should provide their VAT registration number.Orders, which must be accompanied by payment, may be sent to a bookseller, subscription agent ordirect to the publishers : Cambridge University Press, The Edinburgh Building, Shaftesbury Road,Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK. Orders from the USA, Canada or Mexico should be sent to CambridgeUniversity Press, Journals Fulfillment Department, 100 Brook Hill Drive, West Nyack, New York10994–2133. Japanese prices for institutions are available from Kinokuniya Company Ltd, P.O. Box55, Chitose, Tokyo 156, Japan. Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY, and at additional mailingoffices.

Copying: This journal is registered with the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive,Danvers, MA 01923, USA. Organisations in the USA that are also registered with C.C.C. maytherefore copy material (beyond the limits permitted by sections 107 and 108 of US copyright law)subject to payment to C.C.C. of the per-copy fee of $12. This consent does not extend to multiplecopying for promotional or commercial purposes. Code 0144–686X/2014 $12.

ISI Tear Sheet Service, 3501 Market Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA, is authorisedto supply single copies of separate articles for private use only.

Organisations authorised by the Copyright Licensing Agency may also copy material subject to theusual conditions. For all other use, permission should be sought from Cambridge or the AmericanBranch of Cambridge University Press.

Internet Access: This journal is included in the Cambridge Journals Online service which can be found at journals.cambridge.org.

Printed in the UK by Bell & Bain Limited.

Rebekah Luff University of SouthamptonSuzanne Moffatt Newcastle UniversitySally Richards Oxford Brookes UniversityMary Pat Sullivan, Brunel University, UK

Martin Kohli European University Institute, ItalyNeal Krause University of Michigan, USAJohn McCormack La Trobe University, AustraliaVictor W. Marshall University of NorthCarolina, Chapel Hill, USA

Anne E. Martin-Matthews University ofBritish Columbia, Canada

Valerie Møller Rhodes University, Republicof South Africa

Du Peng Renmin University of China, Beijing

EditorCHRISTINA VICTORSchool of Health Sciences and Social Care,

Brunel University, UK

Deputy EditorJIM OGGUnité de Recherche sur le Vieillissement,

Caisse Nationale d’Assurance Vieillesse,Paris, France

Review EditorsCAROLINE HOLLAND Faculty of Health and Social Care,

The Open University, UK

JOSIE TETLEYManchester Metropolitan University, UK

Associate EditorsERIC BONSANGMaastricht University, The NetherlandsSIMON EVANSAssociation for Dementia Studies, University of Worcester, UK

MARTIN HYDEStress Research Institute, Stockholm University,Sweden

SALLY KEELINGUniversity of Otago, New ZealandQualitative AdvisorJENNY HISLOPUniversity of Oxford, UKEditorial AssistantMILES LAMBERT

use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X14000105Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 65.21.228.167, on 09 Jan 2022 at 08:15:55, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of