Ageing and gender One of Arber's main areas of research has been in the field of the Sociology of Ageing and how gender inequalities develop in later life. Much of the seminal work in this discipline was developed together with
Jay Ginn, such as
Connecting Gender and Ageing in 1995 which won the
Age Concern prize for best book on Ageing in 1996 and
Gender and Ageing: Changing Roles and Relationships. In 2000 she established and is co-director of the
Centre for Research on Ageing and Gender (CRAG) at University of Surrey. She is co-editor of
Contemporary Grandparenting: Changing Family Relationships in Global Contexts.
Sleep Sara has been pioneering empirical research on the sociology of sleep since 2001. Recent research was done through SomnIA (Sleep in Ageing), a four-year collaborative research project including researchers from sociology,
psychology,
neuroendocrinology, engineering,
nursing and medicine. The SomnIA research covered various aspects of quality of sleep including amongst older people in care homes. Professor Arber has analysed survey data on the sleeping habits of 14,000 households finding that one in 10 people are using medication to assist in getting to sleep, and women have more problems getting to sleep than men. She has also researched "The biomedical and sociological effects of sleep restriction" for an EU
Marie Curie research project focused on the effects of lack of sleep on health and wellbeing. ==Honours==