YONGJIAN KE (柯永建)

Advancing social sustainability in aged care

Working with my PhD graduate, Dr Kun Wang, I have helped develop an evidence-based program that defines, measures, and improves the social sustainability of aged-care systems and projects across China and Australia. Her work integrates systematic review, content analysis, project case studies (including PPPs), cross-country assessment, and a practice-oriented preprint, creating a coherent path from concepts to indicators to implementation.

1) Foundations: concepts, indicators, and cross-country assessment

We began by consolidating what “social sustainability” means at community and care-delivery levels. Dr Wang's systematic review mapped core constructs (e.g., equity, inclusion, participation, wellbeing, cohesion) and operationalised them into measurable indicators usable by researchers and commissioners (Wang & Ke, 2024a). Building on that conceptual base, she assessed Australia's aged-care system through a structured indicator set, demonstrating how country-level policies and service models can be appraised consistently for social outcomes (Wang & Ke, 2024b). In parallel, we quantified the “social pillar” of sustainable development in Chinese aged-care projects, providing a baseline of current practice and a diagnostic view of where improvement is most needed (Wang et al., 2024b). Together, these studies move the field beyond high-level statements toward repeatable, indicator-driven evaluation that is comparable across settings.

2) Public discourse and lived experience: what media reveal

To understand societal expectations and pain points, Dr Wang analysed news reporting on home- and community-based long-term care in China (Wang et al., 2021). The findings surface recurring concerns, such as access, affordability, quality, workforce capacity, and family burden, that shape public legitimacy for reforms. A companion content analysis of media reporting on institutional care highlights how the built environment, staffing, and care processes are framed and scrutinised in practice (Wang et al., 2024a). These studies complement indicator frameworks by showing how social acceptability is constructed in the public sphere: what citizens read, share, and worry about becomes a de facto checklist for socially sustainable care.

3) Delivery mechanisms: PPP pathways and project-level practice

Because governance and contracting influence social outcomes, Dr Wang examined how public-private partnerships (PPPs) can support socially sustainable aged-care delivery. A case study of Sydney's Northern Beaches Hospital PPP traces how contractual choices, risk allocation, performance incentives, and stakeholder engagement relate to social outcomes in a complex health-infrastructure setting (Wang et al., 2022). Extending this line, a study of aged-care PPPs in China identifies critical practices and realisation paths, translating high-level social objectives into procurement requirements, performance criteria, and day-to-day management behaviours that affect dignity, access, and continuity of care (Wang et al., 2023). These papers demonstrate that social sustainability is not an “add-on”; it must be designed into delivery models and backed by enforceable metrics.

4) Integration and application: a practice-oriented case guide

Dr Wang's most recent preprint distils the above strands into an applied, case-based guide for achieving social sustainability in PPP aged-care projects in China (Wang et al., 2025). It shows how to (i) select context-appropriate indicators, (ii) embed them contractually and managerially, and (iii) track them over time to support continuous improvement. In practical terms, it turns the conceptual and empirical insights from earlier work into a stepwise approach for commissioners and providers tasked with delivering measurable social value.

What this program of research contributes

Across eight publications, Dr Wang's contributions provide:

For my website audience, e.g. policy leaders, providers, and researchers, the takeaway is clear: if we want aged-care systems and projects to be socially sustainable, we must (1) measure what matters to people, (2) align contracts and governance with those measures, and (3) track performance transparently over time. Dr Wang's work offers the integrated evidence base to do exactly that.

Journal papers discussed on this page