RETHINKING SOLIDARITY THROUGH WELFARE TECHNOLOGY FOR OLDER ADULTS

The welfare state is under pressure. Demographic changes, high expectations for services, and limited resources demand new approaches to service provision. In Norway, national authorities advocate for the use of technology and the involvement of volunteers in health and care services. This paper ex...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brita Gjerstad, Inger Lise Teig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Yerevan State University 2025-06-01
Series:Banber Erevani Hamalsarani. Sots'iologia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ysu.am/index.php/bulletin-ysu-sociology/article/view/13265
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849422366234378240
author Brita Gjerstad
Inger Lise Teig
author_facet Brita Gjerstad
Inger Lise Teig
author_sort Brita Gjerstad
collection DOAJ
description The welfare state is under pressure. Demographic changes, high expectations for services, and limited resources demand new approaches to service provision. In Norway, national authorities advocate for the use of technology and the involvement of volunteers in health and care services. This paper explores the relationship between solidarity, technology and volunteerism by asking whether the use of technology in health service delivery aligns with the values of solidarity. The empirical basis of the paper is qualitative sub-studies from the research project Caring Futures, as presented in three articles. The sub-studies reveal that technologists strongly support increased use of technology. By framing technology as a means to promote autonomy, they implicitly downplay human dependency. As a result, technology appears to conflict with a concept of solidarity rooted in mutual interaction. In contrast, relatives of nursing home residents recognise and accept dependency. Rather than attempting to eliminate it, they embrace dependency as a foundation for social connection, mutual responsibility and solidarity.
format Article
id doaj-art-5ecbbe02a6204591bb331f66c09b08ef
institution Kabale University
issn 2579-2938
2738-263X
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Yerevan State University
record_format Article
series Banber Erevani Hamalsarani. Sots'iologia
spelling doaj-art-5ecbbe02a6204591bb331f66c09b08ef2025-08-20T03:31:07ZengYerevan State UniversityBanber Erevani Hamalsarani. Sots'iologia2579-29382738-263X2025-06-01161(41)10.46991/BYSU.F/2025.16.1.041RETHINKING SOLIDARITY THROUGH WELFARE TECHNOLOGY FOR OLDER ADULTSBrita Gjerstad0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7413-3664Inger Lise Teig1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0093-1684University of StavangerUniversity of Bergen The welfare state is under pressure. Demographic changes, high expectations for services, and limited resources demand new approaches to service provision. In Norway, national authorities advocate for the use of technology and the involvement of volunteers in health and care services. This paper explores the relationship between solidarity, technology and volunteerism by asking whether the use of technology in health service delivery aligns with the values of solidarity. The empirical basis of the paper is qualitative sub-studies from the research project Caring Futures, as presented in three articles. The sub-studies reveal that technologists strongly support increased use of technology. By framing technology as a means to promote autonomy, they implicitly downplay human dependency. As a result, technology appears to conflict with a concept of solidarity rooted in mutual interaction. In contrast, relatives of nursing home residents recognise and accept dependency. Rather than attempting to eliminate it, they embrace dependency as a foundation for social connection, mutual responsibility and solidarity. https://journals.ysu.am/index.php/bulletin-ysu-sociology/article/view/13265Autonomy, elderly care, solidarity, technology, volunteerism, welfare state Autonomyelderly caresolidaritytechnologyvolunteerism
spellingShingle Brita Gjerstad
Inger Lise Teig
RETHINKING SOLIDARITY THROUGH WELFARE TECHNOLOGY FOR OLDER ADULTS
Banber Erevani Hamalsarani. Sots'iologia
Autonomy, elderly care, solidarity, technology, volunteerism, welfare state
Autonomy
elderly care
solidarity
technology
volunteerism
title RETHINKING SOLIDARITY THROUGH WELFARE TECHNOLOGY FOR OLDER ADULTS
title_full RETHINKING SOLIDARITY THROUGH WELFARE TECHNOLOGY FOR OLDER ADULTS
title_fullStr RETHINKING SOLIDARITY THROUGH WELFARE TECHNOLOGY FOR OLDER ADULTS
title_full_unstemmed RETHINKING SOLIDARITY THROUGH WELFARE TECHNOLOGY FOR OLDER ADULTS
title_short RETHINKING SOLIDARITY THROUGH WELFARE TECHNOLOGY FOR OLDER ADULTS
title_sort rethinking solidarity through welfare technology for older adults
topic Autonomy, elderly care, solidarity, technology, volunteerism, welfare state
Autonomy
elderly care
solidarity
technology
volunteerism
url https://journals.ysu.am/index.php/bulletin-ysu-sociology/article/view/13265
work_keys_str_mv AT britagjerstad rethinkingsolidaritythroughwelfaretechnologyforolderadults
AT ingerliseteig rethinkingsolidaritythroughwelfaretechnologyforolderadults