Theorising Later-Career as a Basis for Enhancing Inclusion and Extending Working Lives Through Human Resource Development

Russell Warhurst, Kate Black*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Population ageing in developed economies has prompted national level policies for extending working lives (EWL). However, these policies have typically failed to reduce age discrimination or premature workforce exit. Therefore, organisational policies for EWL are currently to the fore and human resource development (HRD) ‘activation’ policies are evaluated here. However, these policies are found to be of only limited effectiveness in ensuring social justice, equity, and inclusion in later-career and beyond. A Critical-HRD lens is adopted to show how the established HRD narrative of lifelong learning can inadvertently contribute to workers being disadvantaged in later-career. Social-constructionist identity theorising is developed to better understand later-career and to explain older-workers’ behaviour. The theorisation is then applied to discuss HRD interventions with potential for developing a positive sense-of-self among older-workers and retirees to thereby improve equity, inclusion, and social justice. Implications for HRD researchers and professionals and for HRD policy for EWLs are detailed.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)522-544
Number of pages23
JournalHuman Resource Development Review
Volume23
Issue number4
Early online date26 Jul 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2024

Keywords

  • extending-working-lives
  • identity
  • inclusivity
  • later-career
  • older-workers
  • social-justice

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