Oppong, C.2019-03-272019-03-272006-11https://doi.org/10.1177/0164027506291744Volume: 28 issue: 6, page(s): 654-668http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh/handle/123456789/28899By focusing on old people in sub-Saharan Africa, the author illustrates the need for comparative analyses of how culture, sociopolitical systems, and sweeping social change shape lives, interconnections, opportunities, and constraints among older people. In such work, gender contrasts are critical. Because of their position in reproduction and marital patterns, women in sub-Saharan Africa have tended to use lineal strategies, focused on children and grandchildren, in contrast to the more lateral, partner-oriented strategies followed by men. Migration into urban areas and the AIDS pandemic have left many older women in charge of grandchildren in rural areas with inadequate resources and infrastructure. Shaped by traditional values, norms, and roles in their early lives, they currently find many expectations unmet. Indeed, some of the traditional norms that ensured respect, support, reciprocity, and embeddedness may now leave many older people, especially women, isolated, weakened, and victims of illness and violence. © 2006 Sage Publications.enAIDSDemographic changeGenderSocial integrationSub-Saharan AfricaFamilial roles and social transformations: Older men and women in sub-Saharan AfricaArticle