
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Could the realities of an aging population and a declining birth rate soon make our obsession with youth a thing of the past? It's not just an equity issue it also has implications for politics and economics, because the citizens and consumers of the future will inevitably be older. So, how do we reframe our perceptions of aging to make the most of a very different future workplace?
Guests
Assistant Professor Sven Brodmerkel – Advertising and Integrated Marketing Communications, Bond University
Assistant Professor Nicole Dalmer — Associate Director of the Gilbrea Centre for Studies in Aging, McMaster University (Canada)
Avivah Wittenberg-Cox — CEO of the consultancy 20-first — specialising in gender and generational balance
Dr Markus Wettstein – Research Assistant, Department of Psychology, Humboldt University of Berlin
By ABC Australia4.4
6161 ratings
Could the realities of an aging population and a declining birth rate soon make our obsession with youth a thing of the past? It's not just an equity issue it also has implications for politics and economics, because the citizens and consumers of the future will inevitably be older. So, how do we reframe our perceptions of aging to make the most of a very different future workplace?
Guests
Assistant Professor Sven Brodmerkel – Advertising and Integrated Marketing Communications, Bond University
Assistant Professor Nicole Dalmer — Associate Director of the Gilbrea Centre for Studies in Aging, McMaster University (Canada)
Avivah Wittenberg-Cox — CEO of the consultancy 20-first — specialising in gender and generational balance
Dr Markus Wettstein – Research Assistant, Department of Psychology, Humboldt University of Berlin

201 Listeners

97 Listeners

124 Listeners

89 Listeners

19 Listeners

45 Listeners

29 Listeners

1,734 Listeners

897 Listeners

759 Listeners

131 Listeners

29 Listeners

66 Listeners

47 Listeners

158 Listeners

351 Listeners

769 Listeners

10 Listeners

195 Listeners

114 Listeners

235 Listeners

1,003 Listeners

61 Listeners