바로가기메뉴

본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기

ACOMS+ 및 학술지 리포지터리 설명회

  • 한국과학기술정보연구원(KISTI) 서울분원 대회의실(별관 3층)
  • 2024년 07월 03일(수) 13:30
 

logo

The Aging Society from the Perspective of Urban Infrastructure and Community Environment: Searching for Policy and Technological Innovation

Asian Journal of Innovation and Policy / Asian Journal of Innovation and Policy, (P)2287-1608; (E)2287-1616
2020, v.9 no.1, pp.79-94
https://doi.org/10.7545/ajip.2020.9.1.079
Dohyung Kim (California State Polytechnic University, Pomona)
박지영 (University at Buffalo/Seoul National University)
Christine Chang-hee Bae (the University of Washington)
Frank Wen (Southern California Association of Governments)
  • 다운로드 수
  • 조회수

Abstract

This study reviews how an aging society can be connected to the urban-built environment, transportation system, infrastructure, and climate change topics from the perspective of policy and innovation in science and technology. Each topic was described with the aging society that we will encounter in the near future. Based on the expected discussions, we suggested how policy and technological innovations may interact with the new emerging society. Especially, digital transformation is expected to hyper-connect the aging society beyond physical barriers where numerous policies and innovations in science and technology shed light on the elderly population. We observe, however, that this cannot be achieved only by the government sector; rather, municipal governments and local communities, as well as private sectors, all together need to prepare for the new society of the aging population. Furthermore, an ideal approach is to accommodate multidisciplinary studies that can address the policy and technological innovations simultaneously and collectively. By doing so, we can minimize the negative impacts when an aging society approaches.

keywords
Aging society, built environment, community impacts, inter-collaboration between public and private sectors

참고문헌

1.

Arentze, T., Timmermans, H., Jorritsma P., Kalter, M., and Schoemakers, A. (2008). More gray hair – but for whom? Scenario-based simulations of elderly activity travel patterns in 2020. Transportation, 35(5), 613-627.

2.

Bailey, S. S., Jones, S. A., Stout, R. J., Bailey, J. H., Kass, S., Morgan, B.B. (1992). Issues of elderly pedestrians. Transportation Research Record, 1375, 68-72.

3.

Blokker, E. J. M., Vreeburg. J. H. G., and Van Dijk, J. C. (2010). Simulating Residential Water Demand with a Stochastic End-Use Model. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 136(1), 19-26.

4.

Brown, M., Aumann, K., Pitt-Catsouphes, M., Galinsky, E., and Bond, J. T. (2010). Working in retirement, a 21st century phenomenon. Hillsborough: Families and Work Institute.

5.

Cannon, S. and DeGraff, J. (2009). The increasing wildfire and post-fire debris-flow threat in western USA, and implications for consequences of climate change. In Sassa, K. and Catani, P. (eds). Landslides–Disaster Risk Reduction. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.

6.

Cherry, K., Galea, S., Su, L., Welsh, D., Jazwinski, S., and Silva, J. (2009). Cognitive and psychosocial consequences of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita on middle aged, older, and oldest-old adults in the Louisiana Healthy Aging Study (LHAS). Journal of Applied Society of Psychology, 40(10), 2463-2487.

7.

Dalton, M., Jiang, L., Shonali, P., and O’Neill, B. C. (2007). Demographic change and future carbon emissions in China and India. New York, NY: Population Association of America.

8.

Dalton, M., O’Neill, B., Preskawetz, A., Jiang, L., and Pitkin, J. (2008). Population aging and future carbon emissions in the United States. Energy Economics, 30, 642-675.

9.

Dumbaugh, E. (2008). Designing communities to enhance the safety and mobility of older adults: A universal approach. Journal of Planning Literature, 23(1), 17-36.

10.

Dickerson, A. E., Molnar, L. J., Eby, D. W., Adler, G., Bedard, M., Berg-Weger, M. (2007). Transportation and aging: A research agenda for advancing safe mobility. The Gerontologist, 47(5), 578-590.

11.

Dommes, A., Cavallo, V., Vienne, F., Aillerie, I., (2012). Age-related differences in street crossing safety before and after training of older pedestrians. Accident Analysis & Prevention, 44(1), 42-47.

12.

Ebi K, and Meehl, G. (2007). The Heat Is On: Climate Change and Heatwaves in The Midwest. (regional impacts of climate change: four case studies in the United States), Arlington: Pew Center on Global Climate Change.

13.

Federal Highway Administration (FHA). (2018). Summary of Travel Trends: 2017 National Household Travel Survey. FHWA-PL-18-019. Washington D.C.: Federal Highway Administration.

14.

Gamble, J. L., Hurley, B. J., Schultz, P. A., Jaglom, W. S., Krishnan, N., and Harris, M. (2013). Climate change and older Americans: State of the science. Environmental Health Perspectives, 121(1), 15-22.

15.

Giuliano, G, Hu, H., and Lee, K. (2003). Travel Patterns of the Elderly: The Role of Land Use. Research Report 00-8. Los Angeles: Metrans Transportation Center.

16.

Giuliano, G. (2004). Land use and travel patterns among the elderly. Proceedings of Transportation in an Aging Society. November 7-9, 2004. Bethesda, MD.

17.

Global Change Research Program (GCRP). (2009). Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

18.

Hess, D., Norton, J. T., Park, J. Y. and Street, D.A. (2016). Driving decisions of older adults receiving meal delivery: The influence of individual characteristics, the built environment, and neighborhood familiarity. Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice, 88, 73-85.

19.

Hugh, B. (2009). Land use planning and health and well-being. Land Use Policy, 26, 115-123.

20.

Hunter, L. (2000). The Environmental Implications of Population Dynamics. Santa Monica: Rand.

21.

Jiang, L. and Hardee, K. (2011). How do recent population trends matter to climate change? Population Research and Policy Review, 30, 287-312.

22.

Kang, Y., Park, C.S., Park, J. Y. and Cho, D. (2018). Spatial differences in the heavy precipitation risk intensity in South Korea. Human and Ecological Risk Assessment: An International Journal, 24(6), 1579-1594.

23.

Kerr, J., Rosenberg, D., and Frank, L. (2012). The Role of the built environment in healthy aging: Community design, physical activity, and health among older adults. Journal of Planning Literature, 27(1), 43-60.

24.

Kim, D. (2019). The Transportation safety of elderly pedestrian: modeling contributing factors to elderly pedestrian collision. Accident Analysis and Prevention, 131, 268-274.

25.

Kim, D., Ahn, Y., Choi, S., and Kim, K. (2016). Sustainable mobility: Longitudinal analysis of built environment on transit ridership. Sustainability, 8(10), 1016-1030.

26.

Kim, D., Lee, J., and Choi, S. (2015). Balancing mobility and CO2 reduction by an pptimal mode share scheme. International Journal of Urban Science, 19(2), 168-181.

27.

Kim, D., Park, J., and Hong, A. (2018). The role of destination’s built environment on nonmotorized travel behavior: A case of Long Beach, California. Journal of Planning Education and Research, 38(2), 152–166.

28.

Kim, S. (2011). Assessing mobility in an aging society: Personal and built environment factors associated with older people’s subjective transportation deficiency in the US. Transportation Research Part F, 14, 422–429.

29.

Kisser, M., Kiff, J., Oppers, E.S., and M. Soto. (2012). The Impact of Longevity Improvements on U.S. Corporate Defined Benefit Pension Plans. Working Paper, WP/12/170. Washington, D.C.: International Monetary Fund.

30.

Kodra, E., Steinhaeuser, K., and Ganguly, A. R. (2011). Persisting cold extremes under 21st-century warming scenarios. Geophysical Research Letter, 38(8), L08705.

31.

Laumbach, R. J. (2010). Outdoor air pollutants and patient health. American Family Physician, 81(2), 175–180.

32.

Lyman R. A. (1992). Peak and off-peak residential water demand. Water Resource Research, 28(9), 2159-2167.

33.

March, H, Judit, P., and David, S. (2012). Exploring the links between immigration, ageing and domestic water consumption: The case of the metropolitan area of Barcelona. Regional Studies, 46(2), 229-244.

34.

Mather, M., Jacobsen, L.A., and Pollard, K.M. (2015). Population Bulletin; Aging in the Unite-d States. Washington, D.C.: Population Reference Bureau.

Asian Journal of Innovation and Policy