Staying Relevant or Becoming Invisible? Human Legitimacy in Extended Working Lives [abstract]

dc.contributor.authorDieguez, Teresa
dc.contributor.authorLobo, Carla Azevedo
dc.date.accessioned2026-07-03T10:40:02Z
dc.date.available2026-07-03T10:40:02Z
dc.date.issued2026-06-04
dc.description.abstractDemographic ageing, artificial intelligence and increasingly fragmented careers are transforming not just how long people work, but how they are recognised as organisational actors. And with policy and management debates focusing on employability, reskilling and active ageing, less has been asked about a more relational question: under what conditions do individuals remain recognised as legitimate and future-relevant contributors throughout extended working lives? This paper conceptualizes human legitimacy at work as the degree to which an individual is regarded as a meaningful, competent and future-oriented organisational actor. With reference to legitimacy and recognition theory, socioemotional selectivity theory, psychological safety, individual ambidexterity, professional identity and studies of meaningful work, the paper contends that legitimacy cannot be reduced to capability or performance alone. It emerges instead through the alignment of three dimensions: adaptive capacity, social recognition and identity continuity. The paper elaborates on legitimacy misalignment and identifies three configurations: the Invisible Expert, whose capability is overlooked; the Over-Signalled Contributor, whose recognition exceeds current capability alignment; and the Identity-Disrupted Actor, whose participation continues but who experiences diminishing professional self-coherence. By reframing extended working lives as a challenge of recognition rather than retention alone, the paper adds to the literature on leadership and management to suggest legitimacy stewardship as a key leadership responsibility in organisations characterised by demographic change, technological disruption and increasing career uncertainty.
dc.identifier.citationDieguez, T., & Lobo, C. A. (versão aceite para publicação: 04 junho 2026). Staying Relevant or Becoming Invisible? Human Legitimacy in Extended Working Lives [abstract]. In Book of Abstracts of the 22nd European Conference on Management Leadership and Governance (EGMLG 2026), Porto, Portugal, 5-6 November 2026. Repositório Institucional UPT. https://hdl.handle.net/11328/7229
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11328/7229
dc.language.isoeng
dc.rightsopen access
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subjecthuman legitimacy
dc.subjectextended working lives
dc.subjectsocial recognition
dc.subjectidentity continuity
dc.subjectpsychological safety
dc.subjectfuture-oriented legitimacy
dc.subjectleadership
dc.subject.fosCiências Sociais - Economia e Gestão
dc.titleStaying Relevant or Becoming Invisible? Human Legitimacy in Extended Working Lives [abstract]
dc.typeconference paper
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citation.conferenceDate2026-11-05
oaire.citation.conferencePlacePorto, Portugal
oaire.citation.endPage8
oaire.citation.startPage1
oaire.citation.titleBook of Abstracts of the 22nd European Conference on Management Leadership and Governance (EGMLG 2026)
oaire.versionAM - Versão aceite para publicação (postprint)
person.familyNameLobo
person.givenNameCarla Azevedo
person.identifier.ciencia-id2E1D-CA98-5832
person.identifier.orcid0000-0002-6721-376X
person.identifier.ridG-9840-2016
person.identifier.scopus-author-id57210261298
relation.isAuthorOfPublication931348d5-f6cb-4154-9d25-51231eec0d06
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery931348d5-f6cb-4154-9d25-51231eec0d06

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