Mobilising Cross-Sectoral Collaboration in Creating Age-Friendly Cities: Case Studies from Akita and Manchester.

TitleMobilising Cross-Sectoral Collaboration in Creating Age-Friendly Cities: Case Studies from Akita and Manchester.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2025
AuthorsDoran, P, Yarker, S, Buffel, T, Satake, H, Watanabe, F, Kimoto, M, Kodama, A, Kume, Y, Suzuki, K, Makabe, S, Ota, H
JournalInt J Environ Res Public Health
Volume22
Issue1
Date Published2025 Jan 08
ISSN1660-4601
KeywordsAged, Aging, Cities, Cooperative Behavior, Humans, Japan, United Kingdom
Abstract

Developing Age-Friendly Cities and Communities (AFCCs) is an increasingly popular policy response to supporting ageing populations. AFCC programmes rely on cross-sectoral collaboration, involving partnerships among diverse stakeholders working across sectors to address shared goals. However, there remains a limited understanding of what mechanisms and strategies drive collaboration among diverse actors within age-friendly cities. To address this gap, this empirical paper draws on examples from a comparative case study across Akita (Japan) and Manchester (UK), two cities with distinct demographic profiles but both with a longstanding commitment to the age-friendly approach. Case studies were created through a range of data collection methods, namely, a review of secondary data sources, semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders, and fieldwork in each city. Key insights from the case studies relating to the mobilisation of cross-sectoral collaboration were categorised into three themes: leadership and influencing, co-production, and place-based working. These mechanisms are not mutually exclusive; collaboration building through co-production and place-based working is essential to deliver age-friendly programmes, but these mechanisms rely on leadership and influence. Therefore, it is recommended that all three mechanisms be used to effectively mobilise cross-sectoral collaborations to collectively create AFCC and support healthy ageing.

DOI10.3390/ijerph22010073
Alternate JournalInt J Environ Res Public Health
PubMed ID39857526
PubMed Central IDPMC11764577
Grant ListRL 2019 001 / / Leverhulme Trust /