Background and objectives: Critiques of the concept of successful ageing (SA) include attention to its foundation on an individualised western medical approach that emphasizes personal choice, agency, and lifestyle. This paper aims to examine how individual notions of SA can be linked to, and co-constituted by, relational and intergenerational notions of personhood within the broader socio-economic, familial, and cultural contexts of migration.
Research design and methods: Qualitative research was conducted in Australia (2020-2021) with 42 Vietnamese migrants using ethnographic interviews and participant observation. Data analysis applied inductive reasoning and intersectional analysis to investigate the notion of SA from the perspectives of research participants.
Results: Vietnamese migrants identified three dimensions of SA as significant: family fulfilment, individual achievements, and social engagement and protection. Family fulfilment is the most important; other dimensions are rendered meaningless without it. We found out that different generations interpreted SA in varying ways. Adult children prioritize personal success, self-independence, and longevity while grandparents place greater emphasis on the success of their adult children and maintenance of intergenerational relationships.
Discussion and implications: Migrant understandings of SA are deeply influenced by the socio-cultural contexts of both their homeland and current residence. The emphasis on family in shaping SA reflects a social-relational understanding that contrasts with dominant individualistic models of SA. Given the social relational dimension of SA, further research should investigate how distinct migrant experiences of SA shape access to wellbeing in later life.
Keywords: Successful ageing; Vietnamese diaspora; cultural gerontology; migration; social relational theory.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America.