Join co-authors Jeanette Auger and Kerstin Roger for the launch of the fourth edition of Social Perspectives on Death and Dying.
The co-authors will be joined in conversation by the book’s contributors Zohreh Bayatrizi & Catherine White.
Copies of the book will be available for purchase.
About the Book
This 4th edition of Social Perspectives on Death and Dying invites readers to confront these questions directly. Jeanette Auger, joined by Kerstin Roger and four new contributors, brings together the latest research, regulations, and debates on issues such as cremation, suicide, medical assistance in dying (MAID), Indigenous perspectives, and the role of media in shaping our understanding of death.
More than an academic text, this book is a guide for reflection. It challenges readers to face their own thoughts, fears, and feelings about mortality, while examining how Canadian society navigates both traditional practices and emerging, often controversial, choices.
About the Co-authors
Jeanette Auger is a professor emeritus of sociology at Acadia University, where she taught full-time for more than forty years and still teaches two online courses. She has written or co-authored nine books, most in the field of gerontology/aging and queer studies. As well as her teaching and research experience, she has also worked in a variety of capacities as a community development researcher and volunteer, specifically in organizations which provide services and programs to older people and their important ones. She was one of the founders of the Valley Hospice Society and chaired the board of a multi-complex seniors facility in the Annapolis Valley. Her work is intended to assist older people and those who are dying because her philosophy is that we all study and try to assist in our own aging.
Kerstin Roger is a professor at the College of Community and Global Health, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba. Her social science research focuses on the family, caregiving, aging and end of life; global health and wellness across the lifespan, including abuse of older adults; and chronicity and interface with health care systems. Roger has been a principal investigator on multisite nationally funded mixed methods and qualitative research (e.g., CIHR, PHAC, SSHRC, Movember, PrairieAction), as well as conducted federal, provincial and regionally funded research. She has worked on international collaborations, local not-for-profit community initiatives, and continues to co-author and engage graduate students in her research.

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