Home » Health » Revue française des affaires sociales – Number 2022/3 – – What relevance of age in public policies in 2022?

Revue française des affaires sociales – Number 2022/3 – – What relevance of age in public policies in 2022?

by Alexandra Hartman Editor-in-Chief

Page 7 to 20: Laëtitia Ngatcha-Ribert, Bernard Ennuyer and Martine Lagacé – Foreword | Page 21 to 45: María Eugenia Longo – Capital, resource or problem? Youth age in employment policies in Canada, Quebec and France | Page 47 to 63: Tom Chevalier – Minimum income or integration policy? The trajectory of youth income support reforms in France | Page 65 to 87: Lisa Carayon, Julie Mattiussi and Arthur Vuattoux – “We don’t want them to go undercover. » The injunction to the professional integration of young unaccompanied foreigners when they come of age | Page 89 to 107: Adrien Lusinchi – Young “refugees”, young people like the others to be accompanied towards employment? | Page 109 to 127: Vattani Saray-Delabar – The non-autonomous inhabitants of the autonomy residence, revealing the contradictions of the model | Page 129 to 146: Dominique Argoud, Maryse Bresson and Christian Jetté – From age to new forms of categorizing the elderly | Page 147 to 163: Anne-Marie Guillemard – The age category is no longer a relevant category of public action | Pages 165 to 177: Laëtitia Ngatcha-Ribert, Bernard Ennuyer, Marie Beaulieu and Martine Lagacé – Call for multidisciplinary contribution on: “Social representations and category of public action of ages in France and Canada: where are we in 2022? “. For the July-September 2022 issue of RFAS | Pages 181 to 201: Frédérique Trevidy, Yann Benoist, Jean-Paul Cocot, Patrick Cuvilliez, Marcel Le Guen, Abdelaziz Niati, Mélanie Gervais, Cécile Petitot and Rémi Gagnayre – Building your Housing Identity following a homeless journey: participatory research in boarding house | Page 203 to 211: Florence Lamarque – Ethical and professional issues of “going towards”: not distorting this social intervention | Pages 213 to 229: Jean-Charles Basson, Nadine Haschar-Noé, Marina Honta, Michelle Kelly-Irving and Cyrille Delpierre – Towards a Political Sociology of Social Health Inequalities.

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