Programme

Thursday, July 09 and Friday, July 10 will be held at SOAS University of London.
Saturday, July 11 and Sunday, July 12 will be held at University College London Torrington Place Training Centre.
Monday, July 13 will be held online.

Presenter Registration Banner 5


Presentation Schedule


Conference Outline

Thursday, July 09Friday, July 10Saturday, July 11Sunday, July 12Monday, July 13

Conference Venue: SOAS University of London, Brunei Gallery Building

09:00: Conference Check-in & Networking Coffee | Brunei Suite (Ground Floor)

10:00-10:35: Welcome Addresses & Recognition of IAFOR Scholarship Winners | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre & Online
Joseph Haldane, IAFOR & University College London, United Kingdom

10:40-11:05: Keynote Presentation | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre & Online
Don’t let AI Change What it Means to Teach
Allison Littlejohn, University College London, United Kingdom
11:05-11:20: Q&A

11:25-11:50: Keynote Presentation | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre & Online
Lee Jerome, Middlesex University, United Kingdom
11:50-12:05: Q&A

12:05-12:15: Conference Photograph | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre

12:15-13:45: Extended Break

13:45-14:45: The Forum | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre
The Role of the Arts & Humanities in Troubling Times: Part III
Alfonso Garcia-Osuna, Hofstra University, United States (Respondent)
Melina Neophytou, IAFOR, Japan (Moderator)

14:50-15:40: Cultural Programme | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre

15:45-16:45: Welcome Reception & Conference Poster Session | Brunei Suite (Ground Floor) & Theatre Foyer

19:00: Conference Dinner | The Savile Club
This is an optional ticketed event. Further Information

Conference Venue: SOAS University of London, Brunei Gallery Building

08:30: Conference Check-in | Brunei Gallery Suite (Ground Floor)

09:00-09:45: IAFOR Information Session | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre
This session provides an overview of what to expect at the conference, including guidance on preparing your presentation, publishing opportunities, and ways to engage with IAFOR.

09:50-10:10: EGen2026 Special Address | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre & Online
James W. McNally, NACDA & University of Michigan, United States
Evangelia Chrysikou, University College London, United Kingdom

10:15-10:40: Keynote Presentation | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre & Online
Dorina Cadar, University of Sussex, United Kingdom
10:40-10:55: Q&A Session

10:55-11:25: Networking Coffee Break

11:25-11:50: Keynote Presentation | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre & Online
Paul Chamberlain, Royal College of Art, United Kingdom
11:50-12:05: Q&A Session

12:05-13:40: Extended Break

13:40-14:05: Keynote Presentation | Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre & Online
14:05-14:20: Q&A Session

14:30-15:30: Conference Poster Session 2 & Networking Coffee | Brunei Suite (Ground Floor) & Theatre Foyer

18:30-22:00: Networking Event: Classic British Pub Quiz
This is an optional ticketed event held at The Marquis Cornwallis. Further Information

Conference Venue: Torrington Place Training Centre, University College London

09:00: Conference Check-in | Ground Floor

09:15-10:05: Onsite Parallel Session 1 (Workshop Session)
B07 (Basement): ECAH | Creative Dance for Inclusion and Community Leadership (Workshop)
G08 (Ground): ECE | Playing, Growing, and Including Everyone Together (Workshop)
G09 (Ground): ECE | From Ambient Algorithms to Autonomous Agents (Workshop)
G10 (Ground): ECE | Institutional Redesign for Doctoral Completion (Workshop)
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Stitching Identity: Queer Wardrobe Hacking & Visible Mending (Workshop)

10:05-10:20: Coffee Break

10:20-12:00: Onsite Parallel Session 2
B08 (Basement): ECE | Implementation and Assessment of Innovative Technologies in Education
B09 (Basement): ECE | Education and Differences: Special Education and Learning Difficulties
B17 (Basement): EGen | Lifespan Health Promotion
G08 (Ground): ECE | Counselling, Guidance and Adjustment in Education
G09 (Ground): ECE | Inter/Multiculturalism in Language Education
G10 (Ground): ECE | Educational Policy and Professional Development
G12 (Ground): ECAH | Teaching the Arts and Humanities
G13 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Teaching and Learning with AI
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Gender and Sexuality in History and Literature

12:00-12:15: Break

12:15-13:55: Onsite Parallel Session 3
B07 (Basement): ECE | Educational Research and Development
B08 (Basement): ECE | Experiences in Teaching with AI
B09 (Basement): ECE | Reimagining Teacher Education (Panel)
B17 (Basement): EGen | Frailty
G08 (Ground): ECE | Teaching Experiences, Pedagogy and Practice
G09 (Ground): ECE | Foreign Languages Education
G10 (Ground): ECE | Training Teachers
G12 (Ground): ECAH | Arts - Performing Arts Practices: Theater, Dance, Music
G13 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Literature/Literary Studies
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Political Science/Politics

13:55-14:10: Break

14:10-15:50: Onsite Parallel Session 4
B07 (Basement): ECE | Curriculum Design and Development
B08 (Basement): ECE | Implementation of AI in Education
B09 (Basement): ECE | Professional Development in Education
B17 (Basement): EGen | Public Policy
G08 (Ground): ECE | Culture, Inter/Multiculturalism
G09 (Ground): ECE | Languages Education and Applied Linguistics
G10 (Ground): ECE | Teacher Education
G12 (Ground): ECAH | Arts - Visual Arts Practices
G13 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Teaching and Learning in Intercultural Context
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Literature/Literary Studies

15:50-16:05: Coffee Break

16:05-17:45: Onsite Parallel Session 5
B07 (Basement): ECE | Technology and Assessment in Academic Writing
B08 (Basement): ECE | Design and Development of Technologies in Education
B09 (Basement): ECE | Educational Policy, Management and Administration
B17 (Basement): EGen | Resilience
G08 (Ground): ECE | Sustainability Issues in Education
G09 (Ground): ECE | Language Development and Literacy
G10 (Ground): ECE | Higher Education
G12 (Ground): ECAH | Arts - Arts Theory and Criticism
G13 (Ground): ECAH/ECE | Humanities - Teaching and Learning
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Ethnicity and Identity in the Arts and Humanities

Conference Venue: Torrington Place Training Centre, University College London

09:00: Conference Check-in | Ground Floor

09:30-11:10: Onsite Parallel Session 1
B07 (Basement): ECE | Educational Policy, Leadership, Management and Administration
B08 (Basement): ECE | Implementing Technologies in Education
B09 (Basement): ECE | Technologies in Curriculum Design and Development
B17 (Basement): EGen | Built Environment
G08 (Ground): ECE | Education Policy and Administration
G09 (Ground): ECE | Education, Sustainability and Society
G10 (Ground): ECE | Professional Training and Development
G12 (Ground): ECAH | Science, Environment and the Arts and Humanities
G13 (Ground): ECAH | Arts - Visual Arts Practices
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Archives and Curation

11:10-11:25: Coffee Break

11:25-12:40: Onsite Parallel Session 2
B07 (Basement): ECE | Practices in Teacher Training
B08 (Basement): ECE | Learning Experiences and Learner Diversity
B17 (Basement): EGen | Resilience
G08 (Ground): ECE | Design and Assessment of Technologies in Education
G09 (Ground): ECE | Distance and Autonomous Learning
G12 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Science and Environment
G13 (Ground): ECAH | Arts - Arts Practices
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Identity and Literature

12:40-12:55: Break

12:55-14:35: Onsite Parallel Session 3
B07 (Basement): ECE | Primary and Secondary Education
B08 (Basement): ECE | Learning Experiences and Cognitive Development
B09 (Basement): ECE | Implementation and Issues of AI in Education
B17 (Basement): EGen | Resilience
G08 (Ground): ECE | International Education
G09 (Ground): ECE | Teaching Experiences, Pedagogy, Practice & Praxis
G10 (Ground): ECE | Pedagogical Design and Development
G12 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Knowledge
G13 (Ground): ECAH | Arts - Social, Political and Community Agendas in the Arts
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Media, Film Studies and New Media

14:35-14:50: Coffee Break

14:50-16:30: Onsite Parallel Session 4
B07 (Basement): ECE | Foreign Languages Education
B08 (Basement): ECE | Assessment Theories and Methodologies
B09 (Basement): ECE | Innovative Technologies in Education
B17 (Basement): EGen | Lifespan Health Promotion and Loneliness
G08 (Ground): ECE | Communication and Literacy in Education Contexts
G09 (Ground): ECE | Self-regulated Learning
G10 (Ground): ECE | Diversity in Higher Education
G12 (Ground): ECAH | Knowledge, Cyberspace and Technologies
G13 (Ground): ECAH | Arts, Language and Design
G20 (Ground): ECAH | Humanities - Sexuality, Gender, Families

16:40-17:00: Onsite Closing Session | G12 (Ground)

Conference Venue: Online via Zoom

08:55-09:00: Message from IAFOR

09:00-10:00: The Forum (Online) | Live-Stream Room 1
The Role of the Arts & Humanities in Troubling Times: Part III
Apipol Sae-Tung, IAFOR, Japan (Online Moderator)

The Forum is a plenary session designed as a platform for international, intercultural, interdisciplinary—and inclusive—discussions, joining experts and practitioners alike in an open dialogue format. Come share your thoughts and experiences as global educators and researchers.

10:00-10:15: Break

10:15-11:55: Online Parallel Session 1 (Online via Zoom)
Live-Stream Room 1: ECE | Educational Policy, Leadership and Administration
Live-Stream Room 2: ECE | Learning Experiences and Outcomes
Live-Stream Room 3: ECE/ECAH | Knowledge Creation, Preservation and Access
Live-Stream Room 4: ECE/ECAH | Counselling, Guidance and Adjustment in Education
Live-Stream Room 5: ECAH | Teaching, Learning and Practices in the Arts
Live-Stream Room 6: ECE | Higher Education
Live-Stream Room 7: EGen | Ageing and Gerontology

11:55-12:05: Break

12:05-13:45: Online Parallel Session 2 (Online via Zoom)
Live-Stream Room 1: ECE | Educational Policy, Leadership, Management and Administration
Live-Stream Room 2: ECE | Teaching Experiences, Pedagogy, Practice & Praxis
Live-Stream Room 3: ECE | Design, Implementation and Assessment of Innovative Technologies in Education
Live-Stream Room 4: ECAH/ECE | Arts - Teaching and Learning
Live-Stream Room 5: ECAH | Humanities - Literature/Literary Studies
Live-Stream Room 6: ECE | Language Development and Literacy
Live-Stream Room 7: EGen | Ageing and Gerontology

13:45-13:55: Break

13:55-15:35: Online Parallel Session 3 (Online via Zoom)
Live-Stream Room 1: ECAH/ECE | Educational Policy, Leadership, Management and Administration
Live-Stream Room 2: ECE | Foreign Languages Education and Applied Linguistics
Live-Stream Room 3: ECE | Design and Implementation of AI in Education
Live-Stream Room 4: ECAH/ECE | Concerns and Implementation of Technologies in Education
Live-Stream Room 5: ECAH | Humanities - Literature/Literary Studies

15:35-15:40: Message from IAFOR

*Please be aware that the above schedule may be subject to change.

Audience Registration Banner 1


Accepted Presentations

One of the greatest strengths of IAFOR’s international conferences is their international and intercultural diversity.
As of May 11, 2026, EGen2026 has received over 160 submissions from 51 countries.


Speakers

To be announced

  • Dorina Cadar
    Dorina Cadar
    Brighton and Sussex Medical School, United Kingdom
  • Paul Chamberlain
    Paul Chamberlain
    Royal College of Art, United Kingdom
  • Evangelia Chrysikou
    Evangelia Chrysikou
    University College London (UCL), United Kingdom
  • Alfonso J. García-Osuna
    Alfonso J. García-Osuna
    Hofstra University, United States
  • Lee Jerome
    Lee Jerome
    Middlesex University, United Kingdom
  • Allison Littlejohn
    Allison Littlejohn
    University College London (UCL), United Kingdom
  • Justin McGuirk
    Justin McGuirk
    The Design Museum, United Kingdom
  • James W. McNally
    James W. McNally
    University of Michigan & NACDA Program on Aging, United States

Featured Presentations

To be announced

  • The Forum
    The Forum
    Come share your thoughts and experiences as global educators and researchers.
  • Don’t Let AI Change What It Means to Teach
    Don’t Let AI Change What It Means to Teach
    Keynote Presentation: Allison Littlejohn
  • What Can Teachers Do to Promote Democratic Citizenship?
    What Can Teachers Do to Promote Democratic Citizenship?
    Keynote Presentation: Lee Jerome
  • From Risk to Resilience: Rethinking Ageing, Brain Health, and Dementia Prevention
    From Risk to Resilience: Rethinking Ageing, Brain Health, and Dementia Prevention
    Keynote Presentation: Dorina Cadar
  • The 100-Year Life and Our Future Home
    The 100-Year Life and Our Future Home
    Keynote Presentation: Paul Chamberlain


Conference Programme & Abstract Book

The draft version of the Conference Programme will be available online on June 01, 2026. All registered delegates will be notified of this publication by email.

Important Information Emails

All registered attendees will receive an Important Information email and updates in the run-up to the conference. Please check your email inbox for something from "iafor.org". If you can not find these emails in your normal inbox, it is worth checking in your spam or junk mail folders as many programs filter out emails this way. If these did end up in one of these folders, please add the address to your acceptable senders' folder by whatever method your email program can do this.


Previous Programming

View details of programming for past EGen conferences via the links below.

Dorina Cadar
Brighton and Sussex Medical School, United Kingdom

Biography

Professor Dorina Cadar is a Professor in Ageing and Behavioural Science at Brighton and Sussex Medical School in partnership with the University of Brighton and the University of Sussex, United Kingdom. She leads interdisciplinary research on healthy ageing, cognitive resilience, dementia prevention, and population mental health. She is Director of the CEDAR Lab and Deputy Director of the Centre for Dementia Studies and Deputy Director of Research and Knowledge Exchange at Brighton and Sussex Medical School. Her research combines epidemiology, behavioural science, neuroscience, and public health approaches to investigate how social, psychological, cardiovascular, and lifestyle factors influence cognitive ageing and brain health across the lifecourse. She works extensively with large longitudinal cohort studies, including the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing and UK Biobank, alongside community and translational research focused on resilience, prevention, and inequalities in ageing. Professor Cadar has led and collaborated on projects funded by organisations including UKRI, NIHR, UKHSA, Alzheimer’s Research UK, and the British Academy. She is also actively involved in public engagement initiatives aimed at raising awareness and improving communication about healthy ageing and dementia prevention, including projects selected for national scientific exhibitions and community outreach programmes.

Keynote Presentation (2026) | From Risk to Resilience: Rethinking Ageing, Brain Health, and Dementia Prevention
Paul Chamberlain
Royal College of Art, United Kingdom

Biography

Dr Paul Chamberlain is Professor of Design and Co-Chair of the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design at the Royal College of Art, United Kingdom, a global leader in Inclusive Design founded in 1991. Professor Chamberlain’s research informs the design of the built environment through developing tools and methods to encourage and engender innovation and applied with a focus on health and wellbeing, disability, and ageing. His work explores the multi-sensory aspects of design and the role of artefacts that help define pertinent social questions as much as present solutions. He has led major interdisciplinary projects, won international awards for his designs, and delivered keynote lectures at leading international events. He has over 100 published texts and his work has been exhibited widely, including solo exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Taiwan, The WAAG Amsterdam and the Venice Architectural Biennale. Paul was recently the principal investigator of a £4m Research England funded project that focused on the 100-year life and the Future Home and was the first visiting international resident scholar of the Neutra Institute, United States. He was a member of the Art & Design, History Theory and Practice panel for the UK Research Excellence Framework 2021, was founder and director of research group Lab4Living, and is founding editor of the Design for Health Journal (Taylor and Francis).

Keynote Presentation (2026) | The 100-Year Life and Our Future Home
Evangelia Chrysikou
University College London (UCL), United Kingdom

Biography

Dr Evangelia Chrysikou, RIBA is Associate Professor within the Bartlett School of Sustainable Construction at University College London, United Kingdom, and Founder/Programme Director of the university’s MSc Healthcare Facilities. A multi-awarded RIBA architect and healthcare planner, Dr Chrysikou has published widely and won several prestigious grants and fellowships from international organisations, including Horizon 2020, UKRI, Wellcome, British Academy, Royal Society of New Zealand, and the Sasakawa Foundation. Her research interests lie at the spectrum of inclusion in relation to design, spanning across the disciplines of built environment, health, digital technologies and the social sciences. Dr Chrysikou is a member of the National Accessibility Authority, Hellenic Republic by invitation from the Greek Prime Minister, and a member of the Urban Land Institute’s (ULI) Life Sciences and Healthcare Council Leadership Committee. She was the coordinator of the Environment Section of the EIPonAHA, EU, and has worked as a consultant for international government bodies such as the Japanese MOFA, Peru Reconstruction Mechanism, and the British Government for projects related to healthcare planning and architecture. She was elected Vice-President of the Urban Public Health section of EUPHA in 2018.

Previous Presentations

Featured Interview (2022) | Featured Interview with Miriam Weber, WHO European Healthy Cities Network Chair for Utrecht, Netherlands
Alfonso J. García-Osuna
Hofstra University, United States

Biography

Alfonso J. García-Osuna has taught at Hofstra University and at City University of NY-Kingsborough for over 35 years. He specialises in mediaeval and early modern literature, receiving his PhD (1989) from the Graduate School of the City University of New York. He has completed postdoctoral work at the University of Valladolid, Spain, has published six books, and is a frequent contributor to specialised journals. Additionally, Dr García-Osuna is the editor of the IAFOR Journal of Arts and Humanities.

Alfonso received primary and secondary education in Las Palmas in the Canary Islands, the place where his family originated and where he grew up. An avid cyclist, he has completed the Road to Santiago, an 867-kilometre route through northern Spain, eight times.

The Forum (2026) | The Role of the Arts & Humanities in Troubling Times: Part 3

Previous Presentations

Keynote Presentation (2024) | Humanities at the Helm: Mobilising Scholars to Confront the Planetary Climate Crisis
Lee Jerome
Middlesex University, United Kingdom

Biography

Professor Lee Jerome has worked in secondary schools as a history and sociology teacher, in the charity sector running citizenship projects, and in universities teaching on a variety of courses from undergraduate to doctoral programmes. His main interests are linked to citizenship education, children's rights education, and the work of teachers. He is editor of the academic journal Education, Citizenship and Social Justice and his books include England’s Citizenship Education Experiment (2012), Children’s Rights Education in Diverse Schools (2021 with Hugh Starkey), Votes at 16 (2025 with Ben Kisby) and Educating for Citizenship (forthcoming). Professor Jerome’s recent projects include leading a group of student researchers to develop proposals for the national curriculum review in England, a 3-year student survey of citizenship education in secondary schools, and an international project to explore student-led approaches to learning about divisive contemporary issues.

Keynote Presentation (2026) | TBA
Allison Littlejohn
University College London (UCL), United Kingdom

Biography

Professor Allison Littlejohn is Pro-Vice Provost for Grand Challenge Data Empowered Societies and Professor of Learning and Technology in the UCL Knowledge Lab at University College London (UCL), United Kingdom. Her research expands our understanding of the socio-technical impacts of digital transformation at work and how it impacts work and learning. Professor Littlejohn was previously Director of the UCL Knowledge Lab, University College London (2020 -2025); Dean (Learning & Teaching) at the University of Glasgow, United Kingdom (2019-20); Academic Director for Digital Innovation at the Open University, United Kingdom (2015-2019); and Professor and Director of the Caledonian Academy at Glasgow Caledonian University, United Kingdom (2006-2015). She holds the Ruth Wong Visiting Professorship at the National Institute of Education, Singapore.

Keynote Presentation (2026) | Don’t Let AI Change What it Means to Teach
Justin McGuirk
The Design Museum, United Kingdom

Biography

TBA

Keynote Presentation (2026) | TBA
James W. McNally
University of Michigan & NACDA Program on Aging, United States

Biography

Dr James W. McNally is the Emeritus Research Scientist for the NACDA Program on Aging, located in the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, United States. He was trained initially in forensic anthropology at the University of Maryland and then in formal demography at Georgetown University. As part of this PhD work, Dr McNally was awarded the first minor degree in social gerontology from the Population Studies and Training Center at Brown University, followed by a two-year postdoctoral appointment examining policy applications of health data at Syracuse University’s Center for Policy Research. After teaching at Brown University as an Assistant Research Professor, Dr McNally directed the NACDA Program on Aging from 1998 to 2025, building an internationally recognised collection of seminal studies on the aging lifecourse, health, retirement, and international aspects of ageing. In addition to lifecourse research, he has spent much of his career addressing mechanisms to maintain and strengthen family support networks, focusing on the needs of frail or cognitively impaired elders, presenting on these issues in the United States and internationally. Dr McNally serves on the International Academic Board of IAFOR.

Special Address (2026) | EGen2026 Special Address

Previous Presentations

Workshop Presentation (2022) | NACDA: Data on Aging Resources from Research Ideation to Long-Term Preservation and Sharing
The Forum
Come share your thoughts and experiences as global educators and researchers.

The Forum is a plenary session designed as a platform for international, intercultural, interdisciplinary – and inclusive – discussions, joining experts and practitioners alike in an open dialogue format. Come share your thoughts and experiences as global educators and researchers.

The Forum will take place in two separate formats.
The Forum (Onsite) will be held at the venue and is exclusively for Onsite participants

The Forum (Online) will take place on the Online Day and is open to all Conference participants and IAFOR Members.

Overviews of the ideas, conversations, and key takeaways generated from the discussion at these sessions are recorded and archived in the Conference Report and Intelligence Briefing (ISSN: 2759-4939)

Don’t Let AI Change What It Means to Teach
Keynote Presentation: Allison Littlejohn

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is permeating education systems worldwide, reshaping teaching, learning, and assessment. Research shows that most university educators now use AI tools in their practice (Wang et al, 2026). Even those educators who choose not to use AI in their teaching still encounter AI use in their work, because of the large number of students choosing to use AI to carry out coursework (Digital Education Council, 2025). For academics, the use of AI raises fundamental questions about professional identity and power. AI adoption risks transferring pedagogical choices from educators to technologists, shifting teaching practice away from human-centred practice towards the management of data and technology. This presentation examines how educators draw on cognitive, affective, and social practices to support learning. Practices such as real-time sensemaking through student cues, purposive instructional design anticipating misconceptions, and creating emotional scaffolds that enable learning. While AI can assist with some tasks, it cannot replicate the professional judgment needed for effective teaching. Taking a wider perspective, this keynote will explore the effects of AI and data usage on professional agency, highlighting power shifts and vulnerabilities of people in different professions. Ways to navigate these vulnerabilities will also be discussed through forms of professional development that allow the negotiation of future work in ways that ensure AI adoption empowers human workers, rather than the AI being empowered by human work.

Read presenter's biography
What Can Teachers Do to Promote Democratic Citizenship?
Keynote Presentation: Lee Jerome

This lecture argues that teachers are uniquely placed to help defend democracy and considers what we can reasonably expect teachers to do and what the evidence suggests about their chance of success. The presentation will start with a brief outline of some of the key contemporary challenges and explore how teachers can exercise agency, even within constrained policy environments. Drawing on a review of the international research literature and recent survey evidence, the presentation will demonstrate that education can strengthen young people’s knowledge and understanding of democracy; their ability to engage in deliberative dialogue; and their willingness to act as active citizens. The session will end with some examples of how schools can support these outcomes through classroom practice, whole-school culture, and community engagement, suggesting that such positive outcomes can be achieved within existing curriculum and policy constraints in many countries.

Read presenter's biography
From Risk to Resilience: Rethinking Ageing, Brain Health, and Dementia Prevention
Keynote Presentation: Dorina Cadar

Population ageing represents one of the greatest scientific, societal, and public health challenges of the 21st century. While ageing and dementia research has traditionally focused on decline, disease, and dependency, there is increasing recognition that resilience, adaptation, and prevention are equally important for understanding healthy ageing and maintaining brain health across the lifecourse. This keynote will explore how interdisciplinary approaches across behavioural science, neuroscience, public health, education, and community research can help reshape the way we think about ageing and dementia prevention in contemporary society.

Drawing on evidence from longitudinal cohort studies, translational research, and community-based projects, the presentation will examine how cardiovascular health, mental wellbeing, social connection, education, lifestyle behaviours, and health inequalities interact to influence cognitive ageing and dementia risk. The lecture will further discuss the role of public engagement, inclusive communication, and community participation in promoting healthier and more resilient ageing societies.

Examples from ongoing research programmes in healthy ageing, resilience, dementia prevention, and public engagement will illustrate how resilience-based approaches can support not only dementia prevention, but also quality of life, wellbeing, independence, and social participation in later life. Emerging directions in digital health, artificial intelligence, and personalised prevention strategies will also be considered, alongside the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration across science, healthcare, education, and the humanities.

The keynote concludes by arguing for a broader and more hopeful framework for ageing research and policy, one that moves beyond disease-centred narratives and towards supporting resilience, dignity, inclusion, and healthy ageing across diverse communities.

Read presenter's biography
The 100-Year Life and Our Future Home
Keynote Presentation: Paul Chamberlain

With advancements in medical science, it is estimated that a quarter of babies born today will live to one hundred years old. This increased life expectancy will bring about many societal changes and economic challenges. The number of years of this extended life that will be spent in good health is not increasing at a proportionate rate. Existing conceptualisations of life, education, work, retirement, a three-stage model, will be replaced by a multi-stage model of life. How and when we exist with these changing aspects of life and where they take place are increasingly less certain as traditional structures of every-day life and the spaces we inhabit are being challenged. This talk explores how inclusive approaches to design might shape our future environment to support healthier ageing and enhance our wellbeing. While advocating the significant value of design to support activities of daily living, cautionary approaches must be taken to understand the positive value and sometimes negative impact of design. This has become more imperative since the increasing democratisation and proliferation of co-design, where non-design experts are increasingly involved in, and sometimes leading, the design process.

Read presenter's biography