1. Global signals: Longevity becomes a policy imperative 

  • A World Economic Forum analysis highlights how countries such as Japan, South Korea, and China are redesigning systems to support longer lives. The report calls for diversifying pensions, investing in prevention-focused health, expanding long-term care, and redesigning work through reskilling and flexible retirement. It also emphasizes social connection and purpose through age-friendly communities and intergenerational engagement. WHO Europe’s forthcoming Ageing is Living strategy echoes this approach by promoting lifelong health, enabling environments, transformed care systems, and action against ageism.  


 

2. From research to systems change 

  • Harvard’s Human Flourishing Program is moving wellbeing research into real-world systems change. Its measures are now used by universities, major employers, cohort studies, and institutions like the World Bank to assess the quality of life. Guided by four goals advancing research, developing practical measures, informing policy and practice, and cultivating cultures where people thrive, its work is shaping education, health, and social policy in more than 70 countries.  This shift is echoed in the work of social innovator Hilary Cottam in the United Kingdom, whose centred welfare models, detailed in Radical Help, show how systems built on dignity, trust, and community improve long-term outcomes and enable people to flourish.  Read more. 


 

3. Designing for longer lives: Learning, connection and care  

  • A recent NPR Morning Edition story by Allison Aubrey highlights a growing ecosystem supporting midlife transitions. Programs like Modern Elder Academy, CoGenerate (founded by Ashoka Fellow Marc Freedman), and Mehbs Remtulla’s What’s neXT50 are helping people design purposeful next chapters. Universities, including Stanford, Yale, Bennington, Colorado Boulder, Minnesota, Union Theological Seminary, Fundação Getulio Varga (FGV) in Brazil and the Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes, are expanding fellowships and courses for lifelong learning and contribution. Midlife is no longer framed as decline. It is emerging as a structured period for renewal and social contribution. Learn more. 

  • California’s 2026 Master Plan for Aging names Eldera.ai, cofounded by Dana Griffin, as part of its strategy to address social isolation. The platform pairs vetted adults aged 60 and above with young people for weekly mentorship, strengthening youth mental health while restoring purpose in later life. By treating youth anxiety, older adult loneliness, and digital fragmentation as interconnected challenges, California is positioning intergenerational connection as social health infrastructure rather than a standalone program. Read more. 

  • A recent New York Times feature shows how AI companions like ElliQ are helping older adults age in place by encouraging routines, conversation, and social engagement. Public agencies are distributing the devices to reduce isolation, reflecting a growing approach: pairing human care systems with AI tools to sustain connection, autonomy, and well-being in later life.  This shift complements models like ITNAmerica,  by Ashoka Fellow Katherine Freund, which enables older adults to remain independent and socially connected through dignified transportation. Read more. 


 

4. Why it matters now 

  • As people live longer, systems built for shorter lifespans are straining, leaving gaps in care, connection, work, and community life. Around the world, Ashoka Fellows are responding with solutions that make longer lives healthier, more inclusive, and more meaningful, from community-based mental health care to age-inclusive workplaces and intergenerational learning. In 2026, we aim to support 10 new Fellows advancing this work. We cannot do it alone. Your contribution will help identify, elect, and scale the next generation of social innovators, ensuring longer lives become better lives. Join us. 


 

As Debra Whitman of AARP noted in The Washington Post, We’re realizing that work doesn’t necessarily stop at one age. In a longevity society, contribution is no longer bounded by retirement; it evolves. 

 

5. Fellows in action 

  • Ashoka Fellow Lorenzo Marini (Spain), through Verificat, is developing a free, age-adapted global news platform to strengthen family media literacy. By combining accessible journalism with tools that foster shared reading and critical thinking, the initiative addresses a key barrier to misinformation resilience: learning together across generations. See more. 


Your Turn 

Ashoka is actively seeking exceptional social innovators driving systems change in New Longevity across healthy living, lifelong contribution, caregiving, intergenerational connection, and narrative change. These changemakers are reshaping how we live and age. Do you know someone transforming the future of longevity? Nominate an Ashoka Fellow today!