Catarina Vieira da Silva is Assistant Professor at the Universidade Católica Portuguesa in Braga, Portugal. She holds a BA from the University of Coimbra, an MA from the Universidade Católica Portuguesa, and a PhD in Social Work (an inter-university doctoral programme between the Universidade Católica Portuguesa and the University of Coimbra). She is a member of the Board of the Faculty of Philosophy and Social Sciences and coordinates the undergraduate degree in Social Work and the Master’s in Applied Social Gerontology. She also serves as Coordinator of the Centro Social da Irmandade de S. Torcato, a non-governmental organisation focused on ageing. Her research and professional interests include poverty and social exclusion, the digital divide, gerontological social work, the use of new technologies in social work, innovative teaching methodologies in higher education, and the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda. She has participated in European-funded research projects, particularly on the digital divide among older adults and on the digital inclusion of migrant and refugee children and young people.Ana Maria da Costa Oliveira is Assistant Professor of Social Work at the Faculty of Human Sciences, Universidade Católica Portuguesa (UCP) in Lisbon, Portugal, where she coordinates the scientific area of Social Sciences and Social Work and contributes to undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral programmes, including the Inter-University Doctoral Programme in Social Work. Her research and teaching focus on digitalisation in social work, ethical governance of technology, and professional judgement in hybrid and digitally mediated practice, grounded in a strengths-based and person-centred approach. She has published and coordinated applied research and evaluation projects at national and international levels, addressing areas such as ageing, homelessness, migration, community mental health, and social innovation. Her work consistently bridges theory and practice, combining critical engagement with digital transformation and a strong commitment to social justice, human rights, and the recognition of people’s capabilities, agency, and lived experience in contemporary welfare systems.