Working Later in Life: How Research Frames the Challenges and Possibilities of Ageing at Work
Abstract
Objectives
This study explores how academic literature addresses the professional inclusion of older adults in the workforce. It investigates emerging patterns and proposed solutions to support later-life employment in the context of demographic ageing and the active ageing policy paradigm.
Methodology
The paper adopts a Structured Literature Review (SLR) methodology, combining bibliometric and thematic analyses. A total of 161 peer-reviewed journal articles published between 2012 and 2024 were analysed using performance metrics and co-occurrence clustering to identify key themes and intellectual trends.
Findings
The analysis identifies five main thematic clusters: policy narratives, digital inclusion, workplace flexibility, emotional well-being, and place-based autonomy. These findings reflect a shift from deficit-based to relational and context-sensitive understandings of ageing at work. However, the literature remains fragmented and limited in intersectional scope.
Value Added
This study provides a novel, multidimensional synthesis of the literature on ageing and work by integrating bibliometric and thematic approaches. It bridges conceptual gaps across disciplines and proposes a coherent framework to guide future policies, organisational strategies, and research on age-inclusive employment.
Recommendations
Organisations and policymakers should adopt inclusive, age-sensitive strategies. They should promote lifelong learning opportunities, enable flexible and phased retirement options, reduce age-related bias in human resource practices, and design physical and social environments that support autonomy, well-being, and meaningful participation for older adults.
© 2025 Justyna Fijałkowska, Federico Lanzalonga, published by SAN University
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.