Markus Schafer, PhD, is Professor of Sociology at Baylor University and is affiliated with The TX Aging Network within the Texas Center on Aging and Population Sciences. His scholarship examines how early-life circumstances shape the aging process as well as how social connectedness and networks both influence and are influenced by health in later life. A Fellow of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA), he serves as Deputy Editor of the Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences and is a recipient of the GSA’s Richard Kalish Innovative Publication Award.Dawn Carr, PhD, is the Mildred and Claude Pepper Professor of Sociology in the Department of Sociology, and Director of the Claude Pepper Center at Florida State University. She is also the Co-Director of the Aging Research on Contexts, Health, and Inequality (ARCHI) lab. Her work seeks to identify factors that enhance health and wellbeing as people move through middle and later life and the resources and interventions that allow people to remain active and engaged members of society for as long as possible. Her recent work examines how paid work and volunteering influences physical, psychological, and cognitive health in middle and later life, and the role of psychological resources in shaping recovery from stressful exposures such as spousal loss, financial precarity, falls, and the onset of chronic health conditions. Rick Settersten is University Distinguished Professor of Life Course and Human Development and Jo Anne Leonard Professor of Healthy Aging Research at Oregon State University, where he has also held leadership roles as Interim Dean, Vice Provost, and Founding Director of the Hallie Ford Center for Healthy Children and Families. Settersten is a specialist in longitudinal and life course studies, with expertise spanning adolescence, adulthood, and aging and research that focuses on transitions, social relationships and networks, social change, and social policies. In the American Sociological Association, he has served as Chair of the Section on Aging and the Life Course and been recognized with the Matilda White Riley Distinguished Scholar Award and the Outstanding Publication Award. Jacqueline L. Angel (PhD Rutgers) is the Wilbur J. Cohen Professor of Health and Social Policy and Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin. Her research focuses on aging, disability and inequalities in access, financing, and organization of community-based care. She is a Principal Investigator on the NIH/NIA Hispanic Established Populations for the Epidemiologic Study of the Elderly. Her forthcoming book, Latino Families in Later Life: A New Caregiver Paradigm (Routledge), forthcoming in 2026.