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Keywords = intergenerational wellbeing

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21 pages, 800 KB  
Article
Parental Communication on Sexual and Reproductive Health in Côte d’Ivoire: An Interpretive Description Study in the Haut-Sassandra Region
by Titilayo Tatiana Agbadje, Marlyse Mbakop Nguebou, Loukou Gilbert Konan, Mariame Koné, Abdoulaye Anne, Jean Ramdé, Souleymane Diabaté and Maman Joyce Dogba
Sexes 2026, 7(1), 13; https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes7010013 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 132
Abstract
In Côte d’Ivoire, parent–child communication (PCC) about sexual and reproductive health (SRH) is often hindered by cultural and social norms. We aimed to explore parental communication on sexual and reproductive health in the Haut-Sassandra region, Côte d’Ivoire. We used an interpretive description approach. [...] Read more.
In Côte d’Ivoire, parent–child communication (PCC) about sexual and reproductive health (SRH) is often hindered by cultural and social norms. We aimed to explore parental communication on sexual and reproductive health in the Haut-Sassandra region, Côte d’Ivoire. We used an interpretive description approach. Participants were parents (mothers and fathers), recruited through purposive sampling. Data were collected through individual interviews. We performed a thematic analysis. Overall, 63 parents participated in the study. The mean age of parents was 41.2. Sexuality remains a taboo subject. Sociocultural factors that hinder PCC are tradition, the need for intergenerational respect, and the fear of incitement. Reasons that explain the gap between intention and actual practice are the young age of the child, low parental self-efficacy, child gender, shame and intergenerational respect. Parents who communicate address the following topics: relationships (e.g., stay away from boys); values, rights, culture and sexuality (e.g., don’t date someone else’s husband); skills for health and well-being (e.g., sex has advantages and disadvantages); the human body and development (e.g., menstruation management); sexuality and sexual behaviour (e.g., practice abstinence); and sexual and reproductive health (e.g., protect oneself against disease). This study highlights the need to support parents in their educational role. Full article
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17 pages, 1088 KB  
Article
Intergenerational Mealtimes in Adult Day Care Settings: Impact of a Pilot Randomised Control Study on the Well-Being, Health, and Food Intake of Older Adults
by Raúl López-López, Reyes Artacho, Celia Rodríguez-Pérez, Judith Justicia-García, Alicia Carrillo and Mariano Sánchez
Healthcare 2026, 14(5), 635; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14050635 - 3 Mar 2026
Viewed by 327
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Empirical evidence on intergenerational commensality in institutional care settings remains scarce. This pilot and feasibility study evaluated the preliminary impact of an innovative intergenerational mealtime model on older adults’ subjective well-being, self-esteem, perceived health, and food consumption in an adult day [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Empirical evidence on intergenerational commensality in institutional care settings remains scarce. This pilot and feasibility study evaluated the preliminary impact of an innovative intergenerational mealtime model on older adults’ subjective well-being, self-esteem, perceived health, and food consumption in an adult day care setting. Methods: A 16-week wait-list randomised controlled pilot trial with a sequential explanatory mixed-methods design was conducted in an intergenerational centre in southern Spain. Twenty-two older adults who reside in a community living setting and attend a day care service were randomly assigned to two intergenerational dining intervention/waiting-list groups or a control group. Participants in the intervention/waiting-list groups had lunch four times per week with children 2–3 years of age, following a structured protocol. The quantitative outcomes examined included subjective well-being (WHO-5 Well-Being Index), self-esteem (Rosenberg scale), perceived health (EuroQol EQ-5D), and objective assessment of plate leftovers using photographic records and the Comstock visual estimation method. Qualitative data were collected through semi-structured interviews and ethnographic observation. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT06996418). Results: Across the study period, intervention, waiting-list, and control groups showed preliminary improvements in subjective well-being and self-esteem, but with no significant group-by-time interaction. In contrast, mixed-effects models revealed an encouraging significant reduction in plate leftovers among older adults during intergenerational meals, particularly in second courses. The reduction was consolidated during the post-intervention follow-up. Qualitative findings showed perceived improvements in emotional well-being, motivation, and appetite, thus highlighting potential relational and affective mechanisms underlying changes in eating behaviour. Conclusions: This pilot study shows promise for intergenerational commensality in adult day care settings and provides preliminary evidence of its potential to promote well-being and self-esteem and reduce food waste among older adults. Larger, multi-centre, appropriately powered trials are warranted to validate these findings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Health Promotion and Long-Term Care for Older Adults)
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34 pages, 1142 KB  
Systematic Review
The Role of Climate-Induced Disaster in Multidimensional Poverty: A Systematic Review and the Multidimensional Climate–Poverty Dynamics (MCPD) Framework
by A B M Nurullah, Liesel Ritchie, Shammy Islam, Harun-Or- Roshid and Nahida Sultana
Sustainability 2026, 18(3), 1667; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18031667 - 6 Feb 2026
Viewed by 641
Abstract
Climate change is a pressing issue that has far-reaching effects on the global ecosystem, societies, and economies. Climate-induced disasters exacerbate multidimensional poverty through economic, social, and environmental pathways. This study examines the relationship between climate-induced disasters and multidimensional poverty, applying a mixed-method design [...] Read more.
Climate change is a pressing issue that has far-reaching effects on the global ecosystem, societies, and economies. Climate-induced disasters exacerbate multidimensional poverty through economic, social, and environmental pathways. This study examines the relationship between climate-induced disasters and multidimensional poverty, applying a mixed-method design comprising a PRISMA-guided systematic review and thematic analysis. Articles published between 1999 and 2025 were retrieved from Scopus and Web of Science, yielding 3587 articles. After reference checking and screening for relevance and availability, we finally reviewed 17 articles. The results highlight that climate-induced disasters disrupt economic and livelihood activities, negatively impact GDP, slow financial development, reduce per capita expenditure ability, and harm agricultural production. Disasters also have negative impacts on health and well-being, education, gender, the natural environment, and culture; these disasters promote intergenerational poverty. Among all stressors, floods and droughts are the most pervasive, and they have different magnitudes and durations of impacts. The assessment identifies governance quality, gender inequality, education, social positions, and environmental degradation as the significant mediating systems influencing vulnerability and recovery. To cope with vulnerabilities, individuals employ a variety of strategies based on their socioeconomic status. Building on these insights, the study develops the Multidimensional Climate–Poverty Dynamics (MCPD) Framework to conceptually capture climate–poverty as a socially constructed and institutionally mediated process. The study contributes theoretically to environmental sociology and empirically to climate policy by framing adaptation as a social process of transformation rather than as solely a survival mechanism. Full article
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28 pages, 1235 KB  
Review
The Family in Transition: A Scoping Review of Retirement’s Relational Impacts
by Marilyn Cox and Heidi Cramm
Fam. Sci. 2026, 2(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.3390/famsci2010004 - 5 Feb 2026
Viewed by 621
Abstract
Retirement marks a pivotal transition not only for individuals but also for their families. Existing research has examined relational aspects of retirement but primarily focuses on how family members influence the retiree’s well-being rather than on the impact of this transition on other [...] Read more.
Retirement marks a pivotal transition not only for individuals but also for their families. Existing research has examined relational aspects of retirement but primarily focuses on how family members influence the retiree’s well-being rather than on the impact of this transition on other family members and the broader family system. To address this imbalance, the present review synthesizes evidence drawing upon Family Life Course Theory and Family Systems Theory. Using a well-established five-stage framework, we conducted extensive database searches and refined our guiding research question. Of the 4034 studies identified, 61 were selected for detailed analysis. Data extraction and thematic coding, supported by MAXQDA 24 software, revealed eight interconnected themes: marital quality and conflict; dyadic adjustments between partners; financial impacts and concerns; time use and leisure; redistribution of domestic roles; health outcomes; emotional and psychological effects on the family unit; and intergenerational dynamics. Across these domains, gender consistently emerged as a central, asymmetrical determinant of adaptation. Ultimately, this review demonstrates that retirement constitutes a relational turning point within families and calls for future research to adopt inclusive, longitudinal designs, and for practitioners and policymakers to develop family-centred interventions that recognize the systemic impact of retirement. Full article
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14 pages, 444 KB  
Article
Multicultural Toronto and the Building of an Ethnic Landscape: Chronic Urban Trauma
by Carlos Teixeira
Behav. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 175; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs16020175 - 26 Jan 2026
Viewed by 316
Abstract
This paper investigates how Toronto’s Portuguese-Azorean community has shaped the city’s multicultural and psychological landscape, focusing particularly on intergenerational experiences of trauma among immigrant youth. Framed within North America’s broader migration dynamics, the study explores the creation and transformation of the ethnic enclave [...] Read more.
This paper investigates how Toronto’s Portuguese-Azorean community has shaped the city’s multicultural and psychological landscape, focusing particularly on intergenerational experiences of trauma among immigrant youth. Framed within North America’s broader migration dynamics, the study explores the creation and transformation of the ethnic enclave “Little Portugal” as both a space of cultural resilience and chronic urban stress. It introduces the concept of chronic urban trauma to describe the persistent psychosocial impact of displacement, assimilation pressures, and gentrification on young Portuguese-Azorean Canadians. While first-generation immigrants constructed cohesive ethnic infrastructures grounded in work, faith, and language, younger generations face cultural dissonance, linguistic loss, and identity fragmentation that manifest as emotional distress and social alienation. These experiences illustrate how structural urban change can perpetuate transgenerational trauma within immigrant families. By integrating perspectives from urban geography, trauma studies, and migration theory, this theoretical work underscores the need for trauma-informed educational and social policies that promote inclusion, belonging, and mental well-being among immigrant youth. Ultimately, the study positions “Little Portugal” as a microcosm of how multicultural cities negotiate the intersections of ethnicity, urban transformation, and psychological resilience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Psychological Trauma and Resilience in Children and Adolescents)
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21 pages, 1688 KB  
Article
Age Integration and Residential Satisfaction in Urban Regeneration Neighborhoods: A Social Sustainability Perspective
by Eun Jung Kim and Hyemin Sim
Buildings 2026, 16(2), 415; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020415 - 19 Jan 2026
Viewed by 335
Abstract
This study analyzes the association between age integration and residential satisfaction in urban regeneration areas. A questionnaire survey was conducted with 569 residents who visited ten Urban Regeneration Community Facilities (URCFs) in Daegu Metropolitan City, South Korea. Age integration was set as the [...] Read more.
This study analyzes the association between age integration and residential satisfaction in urban regeneration areas. A questionnaire survey was conducted with 569 residents who visited ten Urban Regeneration Community Facilities (URCFs) in Daegu Metropolitan City, South Korea. Age integration was set as the main independent variable, and blockwise (sequential-entry) multiple regression analysis was performed while controlling for life satisfaction, community wellbeing, and socio-demographic characteristics. The results indicate that higher levels of age integration are significantly associated with higher residential satisfaction, demonstrating that intergenerational interactions and inclusive relationships play an important role in enhancing satisfaction with the neighborhood. This positive association was also consistent across age cohorts, with no statistically significant differences in correlation strength between age groups. Several control variables, including life satisfaction, selected components of community wellbeing, and income level, also show significant positive associations with residential satisfaction, confirming that personal, social, and environmental factors jointly influence residential satisfaction in urban regeneration areas. These findings highlight the importance of fostering age-integrated environments in urban regeneration policies to enhance the social sustainability of urban neighborhoods. By showing that age integration is associated with higher residential satisfaction even after controlling for life satisfaction, community wellbeing, and socio-demographic characteristics, this study provides empirical evidence on how age-integrated environments can contribute to the social sustainability and community wellbeing of urban regeneration neighborhoods from a social sustainability perspective. Full article
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17 pages, 395 KB  
Article
Exploring Workers’ Experience in Public Administrations: Intergenerational Relations and Change as Difficulties and Potential
by Cristina Curcio and Anna Rosa Donizzetti
Eur. J. Investig. Health Psychol. Educ. 2026, 16(1), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe16010014 - 16 Jan 2026
Viewed by 532
Abstract
Background: In a context of profound transformation within Public Administration, the growing generational diversity of the workforce poses critical challenges to organisational well-being. While ageism is a known risk, the intersectionality of age and gender—manifesting as gendered ageism—remains an under-explored area that can [...] Read more.
Background: In a context of profound transformation within Public Administration, the growing generational diversity of the workforce poses critical challenges to organisational well-being. While ageism is a known risk, the intersectionality of age and gender—manifesting as gendered ageism—remains an under-explored area that can significantly undermine job satisfaction and employee health. Objective: This study aimed to explore the subjective work experience of public sector employees, specifically focusing on intergenerational relations and the impact of gendered ageism. Methods: A qualitative study was conducted involving 30 employees of the Italian Public Administration, recruited via purposive sampling. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews lasting approximately 38 min and analysed using a thematic analysis of elementary contexts via T-Lab software. Results: The analysis revealed four distinct thematic clusters positioned along two main factor axes (Individual/Organisation and Difficulties/Potential). The results show a dichotomy: while positive relationships with colleagues (Cluster 1) and the drive for change (Cluster 4) act as potential resources, the experience is marred by significant difficulties. These include organisational imbalances (Cluster 3) and, crucially, specific experiences of gendered ageism (Cluster 2), manifesting as stereotypes, pressure on women’s physical appearance, and exclusionary dynamics. Conclusions: The findings highlight that gendered ageism is a distinct stressor impacting workforce sustainability. Combating intersectional discrimination represents a strategic priority to safeguard well-being, retain skills, and build a healthy, resilient, and productive working environment. Full article
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33 pages, 12213 KB  
Article
Aging Together: A Sustainability Assessment Framework for Double-Aging Neighborhoods—Kükürtlü District
by Hazer Tarımcılar and Tülin Vural Arslan
Buildings 2025, 15(23), 4357; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15234357 - 1 Dec 2025
Viewed by 975
Abstract
Urban neighborhoods experiencing socio-spatial pressures increasingly struggle with sustainability, especially in contexts where top-down redevelopment models dominate. In Turkey, the commonly used “demolish-and-rebuild” approach is often criticized for neglecting urban identity and the continuity of local communities. This study examines the Kükürtlü Neighborhood [...] Read more.
Urban neighborhoods experiencing socio-spatial pressures increasingly struggle with sustainability, especially in contexts where top-down redevelopment models dominate. In Turkey, the commonly used “demolish-and-rebuild” approach is often criticized for neglecting urban identity and the continuity of local communities. This study examines the Kükürtlü Neighborhood in Bursa, a “double-aged” area characterized by both an elderly population and aging housing stock. Using a mixed-method approach, the study integrates the EcoDistricts framework with participatory spatial analysis and Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to assess sustainability across three priority areas: place, health and wellbeing, and connectivity. Results reveal that while the neighborhood faces structural limitations and underutilized public spaces, it benefits from strong social sustainability rooted in cultural continuity and intergenerational bonds, especially among long-term residents. Conversely, newcomers demonstrate weaker place attachment. These findings inform a set of inclusive, aging-in-place strategies aimed at balancing physical renewal with community preservation. Building on these insights, the study proposes a context-sensitive and potentially adaptable framework to guide sustainability efforts in similar aging urban contexts. The research contributes to international discussions on urban transformation by emphasizing the importance of integrating local lived experiences with spatial planning tools, offering a model for navigating demographic and physical aging in mid-sized cities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Sustainable Built Environment, 2nd Volume)
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15 pages, 1731 KB  
Review
All-Age-Friendly Streets in Chinese and International Research: A Bibliometric and Comparative Review (1994–2024)
by Xuenan Guan, Bo Zhang, Xin Yang, Yan Wang, Tianyi Yang, Marcus White and Xiaoran Huang
Buildings 2025, 15(23), 4336; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15234336 - 28 Nov 2025
Viewed by 599
Abstract
Streets are vital socio-spatial infrastructures that shape mobility, well-being, and social inclusion across age groups. This study conducts a comprehensive bibliometric and comparative review of all-age-friendly street walkability research in the Chinese (CNKI) and English (Web of Science) literature from 1994 to 2024. [...] Read more.
Streets are vital socio-spatial infrastructures that shape mobility, well-being, and social inclusion across age groups. This study conducts a comprehensive bibliometric and comparative review of all-age-friendly street walkability research in the Chinese (CNKI) and English (Web of Science) literature from 1994 to 2024. Using CiteSpace for keyword co-occurrence, clustering, and burst detection, 204 publications were analyzed to map thematic evolution and methodological trends. Results reveal a persistent elderly-oriented bias and fragmented cross-scale integration, with international studies demonstrating earlier theoretical maturity and multi-scalar analytical models, while Chinese research advances in streetscape image analysis, VR simulations, and perception-based designs. Despite their differing trajectories, both studies converge on the shared goal of enhancing walkability, health, and urban livability. This review highlights key research gaps—particularly intergenerational assessment frameworks, explainable analytics, and policy translation—and proposes pathways toward integrating design, planning, and governance to promote all-age-friendly streets worldwide. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Healthy Aging and Built Environment)
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18 pages, 278 KB  
Article
Gendered Attitudes Toward Corporal Punishment: Implications for Prevention of Mental Health Problems in Youth
by Miroslav Rajter and Milani Medvidović
Healthcare 2025, 13(23), 3053; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13233053 - 25 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1145
Abstract
Background: Corporal punishment is a form of violence that poses long-term risks to children’s mental health and wellbeing. Understanding the attitudes that justify such practices is essential for designing preventive and health promotion interventions. Previous research suggests gender differences in these attitudes, [...] Read more.
Background: Corporal punishment is a form of violence that poses long-term risks to children’s mental health and wellbeing. Understanding the attitudes that justify such practices is essential for designing preventive and health promotion interventions. Previous research suggests gender differences in these attitudes, yet the extent and nature of these differences remain unclear. Objective: This study examined gender-related differences in attitudes toward corporal punishment and their implications for youth mental health promotion. Participants and Setting: The study involved 582 university students aged 18 to 40, with a mean age of 22 years. Participants were from various fields of study and were surveyed online. Methods: The Short Situational Scale of Attitudes towards Corporal Punishment (SSS-CP) was developed for this study, depicting hypothetical conflicts between parents and children, culminating in corporal punishment. A quasi-experimental design was used, varying the gender of the participant, parent, and child. Data was analyzed using ANCOVA, controlling for previous experience of corporal punishment. Results: Physical punishment was more justified when the participant was male (6% of criterion variance), when the perpetrator was a female parent (1.3%), and when the child was male (1.8%); however, no significant interaction effects were found. Previous experience with corporal punishment also predicted more approving attitudes toward its use (1.7% of criterion variance). Conclusions: Gender differences in the justification of corporal punishment highlight how social norms shape the acceptance of violence and, consequently, the normalization of behaviors linked to poorer mental health outcomes in youth. Prevention and health promotion programs should integrate gender-sensitive components that address beliefs about violence, foster emotion regulation, and reduce the intergenerational transmission of harmful disciplinary practices. Full article
30 pages, 3788 KB  
Article
A Spatial Spectrum Framework for Age-Friendly Environments: Integrating Docility and Life Space Concepts
by Yeun Sook Lee, Da Young Lee and Eun Jung Jun
Buildings 2025, 15(22), 4164; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15224164 - 19 Nov 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 856
Abstract
As societies confront rapid demographic aging, developing inclusive and age-friendly environments has become a central challenge in urban and housing research. This study proposes an integrated conceptual framework for Aging in Community, extending the traditional Aging in Place model through a multi-scalar perspective. [...] Read more.
As societies confront rapid demographic aging, developing inclusive and age-friendly environments has become a central challenge in urban and housing research. This study proposes an integrated conceptual framework for Aging in Community, extending the traditional Aging in Place model through a multi-scalar perspective. Grounded in Lawton’s Docility Hypothesis and the Life Space Theory, the framework reinterprets aging not as a linear contraction but as a process of adaptive spatial integration across individual, communal, and urban scales. Drawing on spatial spectrum modeling and illustrative cases from South Korea, the analysis demonstrates how universal design principles and intergenerational living strategies can promote mobility, emotional well-being, and social participation among older adults. The study highlights the dynamic interaction between built environments and functional autonomy, revealing how spatial structure and perceived accessibility jointly sustain participation and independence. By conceptualizing Extended Community Space, the research bridges fragmented models such as AIP, NORC, and AFC into a cohesive continuum and positions Korea as an anticipatory laboratory for high-density aging societies. Ultimately, the AIC framework offers both theoretical and policy-level insights for advancing age-friendly design, guiding planners, architects, and policymakers toward adaptive, inclusive, and sustainable approaches that transform longevity into a foundation for collective well-being and social resilience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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17 pages, 1316 KB  
Article
Visual Narratives of Resilience: Caribbean Families’ Coping Before and Since COVID-19
by Karina Donald, Ko-Hui Lin and Xingyi Li
Fam. Sci. 2025, 1(2), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/famsci1020011 - 5 Nov 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1094
Abstract
This study examines how Caribbean families visually represented resilience and emotional coping before and after the onset of COVID-19 pandemic. Using an arts-based research methodology, 25 English-speaking families created visual artworks depicting their strategies for managing stress across these two periods. Visual and [...] Read more.
This study examines how Caribbean families visually represented resilience and emotional coping before and after the onset of COVID-19 pandemic. Using an arts-based research methodology, 25 English-speaking families created visual artworks depicting their strategies for managing stress across these two periods. Visual and thematic analyses identified four central themes of resilience: emotional expression, shifting family dynamics, wellness practices, and enduring cultural traditions. While spiritual and familial values remained foundational over time, the pandemic prompted new forms of emotional expression, as well as greater reliance on nature-based healing practices. These findings highlight resilience as a dynamic, relational, and culturally embedded process of creative adaptation. By integrating creative methodologies with family resilience theory and multisystemic resilience frameworks, this study advances understanding of non-verbal, culturally relevant forms of coping in underrepresented contexts. The use of visual storytelling further demonstrates its potential as both a methodological tool for capturing emotional complexity and a practical resource for fostering intergenerational dialogue and family well-being. Full article
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20 pages, 461 KB  
Article
Sustainable Intergenerational Contact Patterns and Health Equity: Comparing Migrant and Non-Migrant Older Adults in Europe
by Claudia Vogel, Aviad Tur-Sinai and Harald Künemund
Sustainability 2025, 17(21), 9860; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219860 - 5 Nov 2025
Viewed by 735
Abstract
Intergenerational contact is a key component of the informal support systems that contribute to the wellbeing of older adults. As societies age and migration patterns diversify family structures, understanding how contact is sustained across generations becomes increasingly relevant for health equity and the [...] Read more.
Intergenerational contact is a key component of the informal support systems that contribute to the wellbeing of older adults. As societies age and migration patterns diversify family structures, understanding how contact is sustained across generations becomes increasingly relevant for health equity and the sustainability of care systems. In this study, we conceptualise sustainability not in environmental terms but as social and health-system sustainability—that is, the long-term ability of families and care systems to maintain intergenerational ties, ensure equitable access to support, and remain resilient under demographic and social pressures. Drawing on theories of intergenerational solidarity and social capital, this study situates contact as both a resource for individual wellbeing and a pillar of care sustainability in diverse societies. We examine the frequency of contact between parents and adult children among adults aged 50 and above, comparing migrant and non-migrant populations across 25 European countries. Using data from Waves 7, 8, and the COVID-19 wave of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE), we assess both in-person and digital forms of contact before and during the pandemic. Results show that older migrants have less frequent contact with parents but more frequent contact with children than do non-migrants, with similar patterns attested across repeated cross-sections (2017, 2019, 2021). The strong contact observed in each cross-section, facilitated by digital tools, implies resilient family ties under public-health stress. However, resilience is uneven: weaker contact with parents among migrant populations reflects structural barriers such as visa restrictions, caregiving responsibilities, discrimination, language barriers, and unequal digital access. Moreover, differences in access and proficiency with digital tools suggest that digital contact did not compensate equally across groups. These findings underscore the importance of sustainable and inclusive strategies in ageing and health policy. Specifically, targeted digital literacy programmes for older migrants, policies supporting transnational caregiving, affordable internet access, mobility solutions, and anti-discrimination measures in family visitation are crucial to reducing inequities. Full article
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18 pages, 418 KB  
Article
Knowledge Connects Our Hearts and Lands: A Qualitative Research Study on Stewarding Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledges for Community Well-Being
by Danya Carroll, Desiree J. Edwards, Ramon Riley and Nicole Redvers
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22(10), 1573; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101573 - 15 Oct 2025
Viewed by 3021
Abstract
Indigenous Peoples have developed and stewarded complex knowledge systems that have contributed to thriving societies. With continued threats to Indigenous lifeways, there is increasing need to further protect traditional ecological knowledges (TEK). We carried out a qualitative study to explore Indigenous community perspectives [...] Read more.
Indigenous Peoples have developed and stewarded complex knowledge systems that have contributed to thriving societies. With continued threats to Indigenous lifeways, there is increasing need to further protect traditional ecological knowledges (TEK). We carried out a qualitative study to explore Indigenous community perspectives on stewarding and protecting TEK while identifying gaps in community-level protections of TEK. We conducted ten semi-structured interviews in December 2024 and one focus group in January 2025 with Indigenous Peoples in the southwestern United States. Reflexive thematic analysis through open coding was carried out using qualitative software. Six overarching themes were characterized in the interviews, which overlapped with findings from the focus group, including the following: (1) Historical and current barriers impact the sharing of TEK; (2) Preserving our language is necessary for intergenerational transmission of our TEK; (3) Our TEK reveals changes to our Lands; (4) Protecting our Lands and medicines is vital to our health; (5) We must take the time to learn our TEK for future generations; and (6) We need to protect our TEK. Our research highlights the importance of supporting Indigenous communities’ capacities to protect their TEK for personal, community, and environmental well-being. Full article
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21 pages, 1111 KB  
Article
Beyond Immediate Impact: A Systems Perspective on the Persistent Effects of Population Policy on Elderly Well-Being
by Haoxuan Cheng, Guang Yang, Zhaopeng Xu and Lufa Zhang
Systems 2025, 13(10), 897; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems13100897 - 11 Oct 2025
Viewed by 672
Abstract
This study adopts a systems perspective to examine the persistent effects of China’s One-Child Policy (OCP) on the subjective well-being of older adults, emphasizing structural persistence, reinforcing feedback, and path-dependent lock-in in complex socio-technical systems. Using nationally representative data from the China Longitudinal [...] Read more.
This study adopts a systems perspective to examine the persistent effects of China’s One-Child Policy (OCP) on the subjective well-being of older adults, emphasizing structural persistence, reinforcing feedback, and path-dependent lock-in in complex socio-technical systems. Using nationally representative data from the China Longitudinal Aging Social Survey (CLASS-2014), we exploit the OCP’s formal rollout at the end of 1979—operationalized with a 1980 cutoff—as a quasi-natural experiment. A Fuzzy Regression Discontinuity (FRD) design identifies the Local Average Treatment Effect of being an only-child parent on late-life well-being, mitigating endogeneity from selection and omitted variables. Theoretically, we integrate three lenses—policy durability and lock-in, intergenerational support, and life course dynamics—to construct a cross-level transmission framework: macro-institutional environments shape substitution capacity and constraint sets; meso-level family restructuring reconfigures support network topology and intergenerational resource flows; micro-level life-course processes accumulate policy-induced adaptations through education, savings, occupation, and residence choices, with effects materializing in old age. Empirically, we find that the OCP significantly reduces subjective well-being among the first generation of affected parents decades later (2SLS estimate ≈ −0.23 on a 1–5 scale). The effects are heterogeneous: rural residents experience large negative impacts, urban effects are muted; men are more adversely affected than women; and individuals without spouses exhibit greater declines than those with spouses. Design validity is supported by a discontinuous shift in fertility at the threshold, smooth density and covariate balance around the cutoff, bandwidth insensitivity, “donut” RD robustness, and a placebo test among ethnic minorities exempt from strict enforcement. These results demonstrate how demographic policies generate lasting impacts on elderly well-being through transforming intergenerational support systems. Policy implications include strengthening rural pension and healthcare systems, expanding community-based eldercare services for spouseless elderly, and developing complementary support programs. Full article
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