Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, Ph by Francesca Occhi for Giorgio Cini Foundation
Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, Ph by Francesca Occhi for Giorgio Cini Foundation
The Fondazione Giorgio Cini engages with themes of particular global significance in cultural, scientific, and political debate.
The conference Global Health in the Age of AI (7–9 November 2024) examined the social implications of artificial intelligence in healthcare.
The conference Democracy and Pandemics (13–15 November 2025) focused on the medical, international, and political dimensions of pandemics.
In 2026 the Foundation turns to the theme of longevity, exploring its many facets — from its distant cultural roots to the present day, when, for the first time in history, life expectancy has risen significantly and the human aspiration to longevity is being pursued systematically through scientific research.
The possibility of living longer represents a great achievement for humankind, yet it also poses political, economic, and ethical challenges that must be studied and discussed so that the benefits of longevity may be accessible to all.
Inequalities in Longevity (3-4 July 2026) brings together twenty international experts to discuss inequalities in longevity, examining their causes and their scientific and socio-economic consequences, and weighing possible policies to reduce these disparities.
Life expectancy is unequal both globally and within individual countries. It is correlated with each country’s level of economic development, but it also depends on social and cultural differences. Wealthier groups live longer and in better conditions than less affluent ones. Education, too, plays an important role in enhancing not only life expectancy but also quality of life in old age. These gaps are often considerable. New medical technologies, such as personalised therapies, may widen such differences, markedly improving the quality of life of those who can access them while leaving others behind.
The social difficulties facing an ageing population are numerous, beginning with the various forms of frailty that affect many older people, such as physical vulnerability, isolation, and chronic illness.
Addressing disparities in longevity calls for wide-ranging measures that include medical prevention, welfare policies and healthcare for the less affluent, as well as education in healthy lifestyles.
Persistent inequalities may call into question the very definition of fairness on which the design of pension, healthcare, and welfare systems rests, at a time when a longer average lifespan entails an increase in the public and private resources needed to ensure adequate living conditions for the elderly.
The theme lies at the heart of two conferences that explore the many aspects of longevity from different perspectives. Humankind and Longevity, to be held from 19 to 21 November 2026, aims to offer a comprehensive view of the effects that the profound changes brought about by a longer life expectancy have on humanity.
Inequalities in Longevity examines these issues from three different perspectives.
Session 1. Sources of inequality: examining issues and trends in life expectancy.
Session 2. The several dimensions of frailty: tackling the medical, economic, and social aspects of vulnerability in the elderly.
Session 3. Policies for addressing inequalities: delving into the nexus between longevity and economic inequality and strategies to contain the latter.
The conference will be live-streamed. Further information and the application form will be available here in the coming days.
9am
Opening Remarks
Daniele Franco
Scientific Director, Fondazione Giorgio Cini
9:20am — 10:20am
Socioeconomic Inequalities in Longevity
Paul Bingley
Danish Center for Social Science Research, Copenhagen
Addressing Old-Age Inequalities: The EU Perspective
Fabiana Pierini
European Commission, DG Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion
Unemployed Growth and the Emerging Inequality of Longevity
Keith Lee
Professor of AI/Finance, Swiss Institute of Artificial Intelligence (SIAI)
10:20am — 10:50am
DISCUSSION
11:10am — 12:10pm
Differential Vulnerability to Climate Change Impacts on Health and Mortality
Raya Muttarak
Università di Bologna
Digital Disparities Among Older Persons: The Role of Artificial Intelligence and Algorithms
Justyna Stypinska
WZB Berlin Social Science Centre, Otto-von-Guericke University, Magdeburg
The Rising Income Gradient in Life Expectancy in Sweden
Mårten Palme
Stockholm University
12:10pm — 12:30pm
DISCUSSION
2:30pm — 3:30pm
Inequalities in Longevity: Rethinking Equity and the Intergenerational Pact in Ageing Societies.
Francesco Landi
Università Cattolica, Roma
Years not Lived: Frailty, Social Isolation and the Inequality of Dependency
Barbara Hanratty
Newcastle University
The Life-Course Construction of Old-Age Poverty
Michel Oris
Spanish Research Council – CSIC, Madrid
3:30pm — 4pm
DISCUSSION
4:20 — 5:40pm
Active and Healthy Ageing
Agar Brugiavini
Università Ca’ Foscari, Venezia
Changing the Way Their Story Ends: A Life-Course Approach to Ageing Equally Well
Christine Brown
WHO Venice
Ageism’s Impacts: A Workplace Perspective Across Spatial Geographies
Lucia Dal Negro
De-LAB, Fondazione Bassetti, Milano
Strategies for Tackling Poverty in Old Age. The Experience of Sant’Egidio
Giancarlo Penza
Comunità di Sant’Egidio
5:40pm — 6:10pm
DISCUSSION
9am — 10am
Can Inequalities in Longevity Be Taken into Account in Public Pension Systems – and Would It Be Appropriate to Do So?
Ole Settergren
Founder of “Better Public Authorities Foundation”
Long-Term Effects of Social Policies in a Life-Course Perspective
Guglielmo Weber
Università di Padova and SHARE – Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe
Pensions and Longevity: From System Sustainability to Individual Preparedness
Monica Paiella
INPS and Università Parthenope
10am — 10:30am
DISCUSSION
10:40am — 12pm
How Can Pension Systems Deal with Inequality in Life Expectancy?
Hervé Boulhol
OECD, Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs
Boosting Productivity and Growth: The Role of Human Capital in the Age of AI
Gregorio De Felice
Chief economist and Head of Research, Intesa Sanpaolo
Inequalities in Pension Coverage in Emerging Markets and Developing Economies
David Pinkus
Executive Director, Coller Pensions, London
Living Longer, Living Unequally: A Life-Cycle Approach to Enhance Welfare and Reduce Inequality
Elsa Fornero
Università di Torino, former Italian Minister of Labour
12pm — 12:30pm
DISCUSSION
Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, Ph by Francesca Occhi for Giorgio Cini Foundation