People

David Ekerdt

David J. Ekerdt

Director, Gerontology Center
Professor, Sociology
785-864-4130
dekerdt@ku.edu

Curriculum Vitae

Related Links
Department of Sociology  http://www.sociology.ku.edu/~sociology/people/ekerdt
Household Moves project: http://www2.ku.edu/~lsi/research/projects/Ekerdt_D/household_moves_project.shtml

Research Interests
I conduct research on the transitions of later life—the ways that people form and act upon expectations for the future in such settings as retirement, making final arrangements, and residential moves.  These funded efforts have included quantitative analyses of the retirement process (anticipation, decision-making, adaptation, effects on health and well-being) using secondary panel data.  I have also studied retirement using qualitative methods to interview couples in home settings, and undertaken document studies that describe emerging ideologies of retirement.

My developing interest in age and consumption centers on the management of possessions in later life.  This project, supported by the National Institute on Aging, studies the tasks that elders undertake for the disposition of personal possessions when they move their residence to smaller quarters in later life. This is a novel topic for gerontological inquiry that bears on numerous issues in aging research and service provision, including independence and effective functioning, self-management, housing and relocation, emotions, self-concept, and family relationships and care giving.

I am a sociologist with considerable multidisciplinary experience, having worked in medical and academic settings and edited the Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences (1994-1997) and the four-volume Macmillan Encyclopedia of Aging (2002).

Selected Publications

Ekerdt, D.J.  (2009).  Consumption: Adulthood and later life.  In D. Carr, R. Crosnoe, M.E. Hughes, & A. Pienta (Eds.), Encyclopedia of the life course and human development, Vol 2 (pp. 62-66)Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA. 

Ekerdt, D.J.  (2009).  Dispossession: The tenacity of things.  In I.R. Jones, P. Higgs, & D.J. Ekerdt, (Eds).  Consumption and generational change: The rise of consumer lifestyles and the transformation of later life (pp. 63-78).  New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books.

Ekerdt, D.J.  (2009).  Population retirement patterns.  In P. Uhlenberg (Ed.), International handbook of population aging (pp.471-491)New York: Springer-Verlag. 

Ekerdt, D.J.  (2010).  Frontiers of research on work and retirement.  Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences, 65B, 69-80.

Sergeant, J., Ekerdt, D.J., & Chapin, R.  (2010).  Older adults’ expectations to move: Do they predict actual community-based or nursing-facility moves within two years?  Journal of Aging and Health, 22, 1029–1053.

Smith, G.V, & Ekerdt, D.J. (2011).  Confronting the material convoy in later life.  Sociological Inquiry, 81, 377-391.

Ekerdt, D.J., Addington, A., & Hayter, B.  (2011).  Distributing possessions.  Generations, 35(3).

Diaz Moore, K., & Ekerdt, D.J.  (2011).  Age and the cultivation of place.  Journal of Aging Studies, 25, 189-192.

Klaus, S., Ekerdt, D.J., & Gajewski, B.J  (2011).  Job satisfaction in birth cohorts of nurses.  Journal of Nursing Management.

Ekerdt, D.J., Luborsky, M., & Lysack, C.  (2011).  Safe passage of goods and self during residential relocation in later life.  Ageing and Society.

Leedahl, S.N., Koenig, T.L., & Ekerdt, D.J.  (in press).  Perceived benefits of VFW Post participation for older adults.  Journal of Gerontological Social Work.

Szinovacz, M.E., Ekerdt, D.J., Butt, A., Barton, K., & Oala, C.R.  (in press).  Families and retirement.  In R. Blieszner &  V.H. Bedford (Eds.), Handbook on aging and the family (2nd ed.).

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