Victor Marshall
Victor Marshall became Professor of Sociology and Director of the
Institute on Aging (IOA) at UNC-CH
in 1999, following a lengthy career at McMaster University and the
University of Toronto. He also directs the Carolina Program in
Healthcare and Aging Research, an IOA training program funded by National Institute on Aging. His research interests and publications are in the
area of aging and the life course with particular attention to work
and health, public policy, and social theory. He has been the
principal investigator of more than 30 grants in various aspects of
aging, including transitions from work to retirement as a social
determinant of health, and human resource management in relation to
the aging of the labor force. He is currently director of the US team
in the Workforce Aging in the New Economy project, which
studies aging workforce issues in the information technology sector in
the US, Canada, Australia, and the European Union. He is also
conducting research for Veterans Affairs Canada concerning the working
careers of discharged Canadian Forces personnel. Among his recent
publications are the edited books, Restructuring Work and the Life
Course (Marshall et al., University of Toronto Press, 2001) and Social
Dynamics of the Life Course: Sequences, Institutions, and
Interrelations (Heinz and Marshall, Aldine de Gruyter, 2003). He
co-edits a book series on the life course and aging for Aldine
de Gruyter, and serves on the editorial boards of four journals. In
2002 he received the Distinguished Mentor Award of the Behavioral and
Social Sciences Section, Gerontological Society of America; he
received the 2003 Academic Gerontologist Award of the Southern
Gerontological Society. For more information see
http://www.aging.unc.edu/bio/marshall/.