Italy is one of the countries with the oldest population in the world. In spite of that fact and the alarming estimates about future demographic trends, long-term care (LTC) policy is still struggling to be acknowledged as a relevant issue in the public debate and political agenda. In sharp contrast with the policy inertia prevailing at the national level, in recent years, many territories have been experimenting with new solutions in the field of LTC, addressing the challenge of building more inclusive local care environments for frail (dependent) elderly people and their families. Building upon this, the current paper aims at dealing with the most recent academic literature on social innovation and the policy discourse elaborated by the European Union to i) develop a "working definition" of social innovation, with specific reference to LTC and elderly care; ii) provide a comparative analysis of a set of selected innovative solutions, which fall between full institutionalization and full family-based care, implemented in two Italian regions, namely, Lombardy and Piedmont; and iii) discuss the factors behind the adoption of socially innovative policy solutions at the local level, thereby shedding light on the key role played by new actors and multistakeholder networks.

Innovating long-term care policy in Italy from the bottom : Confronting the challenge of inclusive local care environments in Lombardy and Piedmont = Innovando en las políticas de cuidado de larga duración en italia: Ante el desafío de la inclusión en los entornos de cuidado local en lombardía y piamonte / I. Madama, F. Maino, F. Razetti. - In: INVESTIGACIONES REGIONALES. - ISSN 1695-7253. - 2019:44(2019), pp. 125-141.

Innovating long-term care policy in Italy from the bottom : Confronting the challenge of inclusive local care environments in Lombardy and Piedmont = Innovando en las políticas de cuidado de larga duración en italia: Ante el desafío de la inclusión en los entornos de cuidado local en lombardía y piamonte

I. Madama
Primo
;
F. Maino
Secondo
;
F. Razetti
Ultimo
2019

Abstract

Italy is one of the countries with the oldest population in the world. In spite of that fact and the alarming estimates about future demographic trends, long-term care (LTC) policy is still struggling to be acknowledged as a relevant issue in the public debate and political agenda. In sharp contrast with the policy inertia prevailing at the national level, in recent years, many territories have been experimenting with new solutions in the field of LTC, addressing the challenge of building more inclusive local care environments for frail (dependent) elderly people and their families. Building upon this, the current paper aims at dealing with the most recent academic literature on social innovation and the policy discourse elaborated by the European Union to i) develop a "working definition" of social innovation, with specific reference to LTC and elderly care; ii) provide a comparative analysis of a set of selected innovative solutions, which fall between full institutionalization and full family-based care, implemented in two Italian regions, namely, Lombardy and Piedmont; and iii) discuss the factors behind the adoption of socially innovative policy solutions at the local level, thereby shedding light on the key role played by new actors and multistakeholder networks.
Italia es uno de los Países más envejecidos del mundo. A pesar de eso y de las alarmantes estimaciones sobre las tendencias demográficas futuras, la política de cuidado de larga duración (Long Term Care - LTC, por sus siglas en inglés) está encontrando dificultades para ser reconocida como uno de los temas centrales del debate público y de la agenda política. Sin embargo, en contraste con la inercia que prevalece a nivel nacional, en los últimos años, muchos territorios han experimentado nuevas soluciones en el campo de la LTC, enfrentando el desafío de crear entornos de cuidado local más inclusivos para las personas mayores vulnerables (dependientes) y sus familias. El presente documento apunta a la literatura académica más reciente sobre innovación social y el discurso político elaborado por la Unión Europea. A lo largo del texto se desarrolla una “definición operacional” de innovación social, con referencia específica al LTC y al cuidado de las personas mayores. Por otro lado, proporciona un análisis comparado sobre las respuestas 126 Madama, I., Maino, F., Razetti, F. Investigaciones Regionales – Journal of Regional Research, 44 (2019), 125-141 ISSN: 1695-7253 e-ISSN: 2340-2717innovadoras que se han dado ante la institucionalización completa y la atención familiar en las dos regiones italianas de Lombardía y Piamonte. Por último, se discuten los factores que hay detrás de la adopción de soluciones políticas socialmente innovadoras a nivel local, arrojando luz sobre el papel clave que desempeñan los nuevos actores y las redes de múltiples stakeholders.
aging; Long-term Care; social innovation; inclusive local care environments; Italy; envejecimiento; cuidado de larga duración; innovación social; ambientes de cuidado local inclusivo;
Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica
2019
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/695656
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