gerontocracy

English

Etymology

From geronto- +‎ -cracy, from Ancient Greek.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˌdʒɛɹənˈtɒkɹəsi/
  • Audio (Southern England):(file)

Noun

gerontocracy (countable and uncountable, plural gerontocracies)

  1. Government by elders; government by elderly rulers.
    Antonym: juvenocracy
    Near-synonym: senilocracy
    • 1972, Harriet Zuckerman, Robert K. Merton, “Age, Aging, and Age Structure in Science”, in Matilda White Riley, Marilyn Johnson, Anne Foner, Aging and Society, volume 3 (A Sociology of Age Stratification), New York, N.Y.: Russell Sage Foundation, →ISBN, page 337:
      It would come as no surprise to find that optimum science policy is apt to be developed neither by gerontocracy nor by juvenocracy but, like the community of scientists itself, by age-diversified meritocracy.
    • 1997 March 9, Paul Krugman, “Does Getting Old Cost Society Too Much?”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN, archived from the original on 3 January 2024:
      But in his 1996 novel, Holy Fire, [Bruce] Sterling imagines a rather different future: a world ruled by an all-powerful gerontocracy, which appropriates most of the world's wealth to pay for ever more costly life-extension techniques.
    • 2017 April 3, Dr A W Niloc, “Resistance Songs for Day 75 - Sex Appeal”, in Daily Kos[2]:
      Young people who are close to writing off the Democratic Party as a dinosaur, as a gerontocracy of prudish abuelos who gave birth by immaculate conception, may be in for a pleasant surprise.
    • 2018, Mikiso Hane, Modern Japan: A Historical Survey[3], 5th edition, Routledge, →ISBN:
      He [Koizumi] was what would pass for a political maverick among Japan's faceless gray gerontocracy.

Translations

See also

Further reading