CEPAR

You are here

News

CEPAR

CEPAR researchers Scientia Professor Kaarin Anstey, Dr Brooke Brady and Dr Lidan Zheng from UNSW Science are are using new technologies to provide new insights on day-to-day activities of research participants.

 
CEPAR

More than 90 researchers, policymakers, bureaucrats and business leaders participated in the Policy Dialogue on Mature Workers in Organisations in June.

CEPAR

A new research brief  – Tapping into Australia’s ageing workforce: Insights from recent research –  published by CEPAR today, presents the newest research insights and trends about Australia’s ageing workforce.

CEPAR

Words by CEPAR Chief Investigator Peter McDonald AM

⚠︎ Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this website may contain images of people who have died.
 
metadata

Researchers of the ARC Centre of Excellence in Population Ageing Research (CEPAR) have today released an online webtool – the Metadata Database on Ageing – which assists researchers working in ageing to understand what survey data is available in Australia and how to gain access.

CEPAR

Over 80 researchers and policymakers registered for the inaugural Online Symposium on Mature Workers in Organisations, which was given by Professor Philip Taylor of the Federation University on 26 May 2021.

CEPAR

A new paper by CEPAR researchers Professor Marian Baird, Associate Professor Myra Hamilton and Dr Andreea Constantin of the University of Sydney has warned that failure to improve the ten-year-old paid parental leave scheme has entrenched gender inequality, both at work and at home.

 

CEPAR

A new study by CEPAR researchers examines decision-making performance on the ‘Game of Dice Task’ – a widely used behavioural measure of decision-making under explicit risk – among older adults.

CEPAR

A new study by CEPAR researchers Dr Kim Kiely, Scientia Professor Kaarin Anstey, and Professor Carol Jagger, and UNSW researcher Dr Richard Tawiah, offers new evidence on social disparities in disability-free life expectancy trends in Australia by examining how these trends have varied by gender, socioeconomic position and severity of disability.