“As people live longer and populations age around the world, the norms surrounding retirement are shifting dramatically. In this groundbreaking book, Cabib explores the complexities of retirement transitions in Chile, a Latin American country with growing labor force participation in older age and a weak pension system. Drawing on life-course, gender, and welfare regime theories, Avoiding Retirement reveals that permanent and predictable retirement is becoming increasingly unexpected and unaffordable for older men and women. Against the backdrop of rapid population aging and widespread economic insecurity across Latin America, this book offers novel insights into evolving patterns of work in later life and provides timely policy recommendations relevant to Latin America and beyond.”Florencia Torche, PhD. Edwards S. Sanford Professor of Sociology and International Affairs, Princeton University, US“Ignacio Cabib masterfully combines quantitative and qualitative data analysis to bring to life the circumstances, worries and hopes of older adults in Chile as they approach, and increasingly avoid retirement. It is a colorful and vivid portray of Chilean society, one of the most unequal and liberal countries in the world with important insights far beyond the Chilean case as inequality, population aging and labor market de-regulation is rising around the Globe. This book is a must read for anyone interested in public policies, retirement, social inequality and aging societies.”Anette Fasang, PhD. Professor of Sociology and Director of the Department of Social Sciences, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany.“Avoiding Retirement in Chile is a significant contribution and a necessary reference, at a pivotal and timely moment for academia, policymakers, and social actors. It offers conjectures, discussion, evidence, and clear and challenging insights based on the experience of a country like Chile, which has progressed to high-income status but lacks the welfare state necessary to address the dilemmas of aging and the policies needed to support transitions throughout the life course." Fabio Bertranou, PhD. Director of the Decent Work Team and the Country Office for the South Cone of Latin America, International Labour Organization (ILO). “I am confident that this book will captivate scholars in Sociology, Organizational Psychology, Social Gerontology, and Political Economy. It delves into a dynamic realm of inquiry, rendered particularly salient by the augmented prevalence of older workers within a multitude of nations spanning both the Global North and South. With this work, Ignacio Cabib solidifies his reputation as a leading international scholar and sets the stage for exciting new discoveries in the field.”Mo Wang, PhD. Editor-in-Chief of the journal Work, Aging & Retirement, and University Distinguished Professor and Lanzillotti-McKethan Eminent Scholar Chair, University of Florida, US“Avoiding Retirement in Chile offers a thoughtful and detailed analysis of the life course factors influencing extended working lives among men and women, in a setting where retirement is increasingly perceived as a non-normative transition in old age. Based on a mix of primary quantitative and qualitative data, this book makes a significant and original contribution to international life course scholarship, particularly in the study of emerging aging dynamics.”Dario Spini, PhD. Professor of Psychology, Université de Lausanne, Switzerland. Director (2010-2022) of the NCCR LIVES Research Center “Overcoming Vulnerability: A Life-Course Perspective”