Event

2023 CAnD3 Keynote Address: Aging across the Decades: Shifting Perspectives, Promising Directions, Self-Reflections

Monday, June 12, 2023 10:30to14:30
Hybrid: Faculty Club, McGill University & Online, 3450 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC, H3A 0E5, CA
Price: 
Free

Registration for this event is closed. Thank you for your interest. Please subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest CAnD3 news. 

We are excited to welcome you to the 2023 CAnD3 Keynote Address! This hybrid event is the culmination of the 2022-2023 Training Program. It will be a moment to celebrate three cohorts of CAnD3 Fellows from 2020 to 2023. The event also marks the halfway point of the $2.5M Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) partnership grant that formed CAnD3.

We hope that you will join us, whether in-person or virtually, for this exciting celebration of our program's successful delivery. To learn more about the CAnD3 program and our impact, read our recently released reports.


Itinerary 

10:30 - 11:00 | Registration with coffee

11:00 - 12:30 | Keynote Lecture by Dr. Anne Martin-Matthews

This year's Keynote Address theme is "Aging across the Decades". Research approaches, policy priorities, and advocacy lenses on aging and aging societies have dramatically changed over the past half a century — with progress in many areas and gaps in others. For example, the discourse in advocacy for older people has shifted to partnerships with older people, with meaningful implications that highlight "Research not about us but with us". Further, the rhetoric and imagery of aging has largely shifted from portrayals of frailty to inclusivity and equity. Tools like social media have allowed the voices of older people to be more present at various tables, allowing inter-generational interactions to become more prevalent.

Our Keynote Lecturer this year is Dr. Anne Martin-Matthews, Professor of Sociology at the University of British Columbia with a distinguished career researching aging, health, and gerontology across the decades. She will address the past, present, and the future: discussing changes in concepts and methods surrounding aging and also what has not changed and the challenges that still remain in addressing the needs of aging societies. Just in Canada, for the first time in history, adults 65 years and over outnumber children 14 years and under, prompting the need for social innovation at every level and sector of society. Hence, the topic of this session is not only timely but vital to build a sustainable future for all generations.

More about Dr. Anne Martin-Matthews

Speaker Dr. Anne Martin-MatthewsAnne Martin-Matthews

Professor, Department of Sociology, University of British Columbia

Associate Vice-President, UBC Health, University of British Columbia

LinkedIn icon hyperlinked to Anne Martin-Matthews' profileWebsite icon hyperlinked to Anne Martin-Matthews' ResearchGate account

Anne Martin-Matthews has a primary research focus on aging, health, and social gerontology. In recent years, she has maintained her research activities while also actively engaged in academic and research administration, serving as the inaugural Associate Vice-President Health at UBC (2019-2022), and the Acting Vice-President, Research, Knowledge Translation and Ethics, for the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) in Ottawa (2017- 2018). Prior to that, she completed two terms (2004-2011) as the Scientific Director of the Institute of Aging, one of 13 national Institutes of the CIHR. Under her leadership, the CIHR Institute of Aging led the development of the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA), launched in 2009, a 20-year study of 50,000 Canadians aged 45-85. Since coming to UBC in 1998, she has held positions as Associate Dean Research, Associate Dean Strategic Initiatives, and Dean pro tem in the Faculty of Arts. She has been a member of the Department of Sociology since 2008. Prior to coming to UBC, she was founding Director of the pan-University Gerontology Research Centre, and a member of the Department of Family Studies, at the University of Guelph (1978-1997).

Anne Martin-Matthews’ publications include two books, Aging and Caring at the Intersection of Work and Home Life: Blurring the Boundaries (2008); Widowhood in Later Life (1990); three edited volumes (on methodology; policy development; and Canadian gerontology in an international context); and journal articles and chapters on health and social care, aging and social support, work-family balance, and rural aging. She is the Past President of the Research Committee on Aging of the International Sociological Association (President, 2010-2014). A former Editor-in-Chief of the Canadian Journal on Aging (1996-2000), she is a member of the editorial board of Ageing and Society (UK).

 

12:30 - 13:30 | Lunch and Poster Session featuring CAnD3 Fellows' research

Stick around for a light lunch and learn about our Fellows' diverse and multidisciplinary research.   

13:30 - 14:30 | Future of Aging Research Panel 

This panel will address future priorities in aging research. Our panelists, Dr. Miles Taylor (Florida State University) and Dr. Janice Keefe (Mount Saint Vincent University) moderated by Dr. Amélie Quesnel-Vallée (McGill University), will speak about purposeful aging, longevity, well-being, caregiving, and ageism. They will highlight how aging research can influence future policy and the urgency and vitality of this research. 

More about our panelists

Speaker Dr. Miles Taylor

Professor, Department of Sociology, Florida State University

Research Associate, Center for Demography and Population Health, Florida State University

Director, Pepper Institute on Aging and Public Policy, Florida State University

Twitter icon hyperlinked to Miles Taylor's accountGoogle Scholar icon hyperlinked to Miles Taylor's profileWebsite icon hyperlinked to Miles Taylor's professional website

Miles G. Taylor is a sociologist, gerontologist, and demographer specializing in the areas of physical and mental health, life course disadvantage, population aging, and family dynamics. A secondary area of expertise surrounds applying and teaching longitudinal quantitative methodologies with relevance to life course questions. Her research primarily examines processes of advantage and disadvantage across the life course and their implications for health in older adulthood. Her research has been published in the Journals of Gerontology: Social Sciences, the Gerontologist, Journal of Aging and Health, and Social Science
and Medicine and has received funding from the National Institute on Aging, Fulbright, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC), and the Claude Pepper Foundation. She was recently elected a fellow of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA), and won the 2017 Busse Research Award from the International Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics (IAGG) and the 2015 University Teaching Award from FSU.


Speaker Dr. Janice Keefe

Janice Keefe

Professor, Department of Family Studies and Gerontology, Mount Saint Vincent University 

Director, NS Centre on Aging, Mount Saint Vincent University

Google Scholar icon hyperlinked to Janice Keefe's profileLinkedIn icon hyperlinked to Janice Keefe's profileWebsite icon hyperlinked to Janice Keefe's professional account

I received my BA in Sociology from the University of Prince Edward Island, my MA in Sociology/Anthropology from the University of Guelph, and my PhD in Family Relations and Human Development in the Department of Family Studies at the University of Guelph.Prior to coming to Mount Saint Vincent University in 1990, I worked in public municipal home care (1986-1990). I am currently a Full Professor and Chair of the Department of Family Studies and Gerontology and hold adjunct appointments at Dalhousie Faculty of Medicine and as a research scientist at the Maritime SPOR Unit.

My research areas include family caregiving policy and practice, home and long term care policy, home and long term care human resources and rural aging. I have been honoured by numerous award for my research contributions, most recently a Global Aging Research Network Award for Applied Research (2017), and Canadian Association on Gerontology’s Distinguished Member Award (2017). From 2002-12 I was the Mount’s first Canada Research Chair in Aging and Caregiving Policy. Currently, I am the Scientific Director of Seniors: Adding Life to Years (SALTY) a national team to improve the quality of life for residents in long term care in Canada (2016-20) and Principal Investigator on How approaches to care shape the pathways of older adult home care clients (2018-22) – both funded by the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR). I am active on numerous advisory boards including Statistics Canada’s Demographic Advisory committee, the European Union’s More Years Better Lives funding initiative and the Canadian Academy of Health Science expert panel on dementia. I enjoy teaching in the Masters and Undergraduate Programs in Family Studies and Gerontology and providing mentorship and supervision to a number of graduate students and post–doctoral fellows.


Speaker Dr. Amélie Quesnel-Vallée

Amélie Quesnel-Vallée (moderator)

Canada Research Chair in Policies and Health Inequalities

Director, McGill Observatory on Health and Social Services Reforms (MOHSSR)

Professor, Departement of Equity, Ethics and Policy and Department of Sociology, McGill University

Twitter icon hyperlinked to Amélie Quesnel-Vallée's accountGoogle Scholar icon hyperlinked to Amélie Quesnel-Vallée's profileLinkedIn icon hyperlinked to Amélie Quesnel-Vallée's profileWebsite icon hyperlinked to Amélie Quesnel-Vallée's professional website

I am a medical sociologist and a social demographer. My research seeks to understand how public policies shape the opportunity structure of individuals over their life course, and thus feed into social inequalities in health. This dual interest in social structure and health outcomes is one of the reasons why I occupy an Associate Professor position at McGill with a joint appointment between the Department of Sociology and the Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy. Thus my research fits squarely within the Social and Economic Determinant of Health axis of the Centre on Population Dynamics. Within this broad context, my research follows two main strands. First, using various longitudinal datasets in Canada and the U.S., as well as innovative methodology drawing from the counterfactual account of causality, I highlight some of the life course dynamics that lead to an association between social determinants and self-rated and mental health. Second, I examine the contribution of health policies to health inequalities. While my research on this issue to date has mainly focused on the U.S. and Canada, my current research activities are setting the stage for historical, inter-provincial and international comparisons of this relationship.

 


Location

This is a hybrid event. The online portion of the event will be held on Zoom, and the in-person portion will be held at the Faculty Club (3450 McTavish Street) at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. In-person capacity is limited. If you registered to attend in-person and can no longer join us, please notify us at cand3 [at] mcgill.ca.


Suggested Readings

Connidis, Ingrid Arnet (2020), “Who Counts as Family Later in Life? Following Theoretical Leads”. Journal of Family Theory and Review, 12: 164-179.  https://doi.org/10.1111/jftr.12367

Timonen, Virpi, & Lolich, Luciana (2020), “Dependency as Status: Older Adults’ Presentations of Self as Recipients of Care”. SAGE Open, 10(4). https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020963590

Wahl, Hans Werner (2020). “Aging Successfully: Possible in Principle? Possible for all? Desirable for all?”  Integrated Psychological and Behavioral Science 54: 251–268. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12124-020-09513-8


 

What are Lunch&Learn's?

The CAnD3 Lunch&Learn series is designed to introduce our Fellows, team members, and partners to emerging research on topics related to population dynamics and population aging. These modules will cover the Four CAnD3 Population Aging Axes: (1) family and social inclusion; (2) education, labour and inequality; (3) migration and ethnicity; and (4) wellbeing and autonomy.


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