Past twenty-one years of age, a striking new cover and a new editor: is
Ageing & Society about to be radically transformed? Not at all, but over
the next five years it will aim to be even better at the things it has been
doing well. To stretch the life course analogy, having reached a
‘mature age’ and with an accomplished juvenilia, the paths that
promise most are well defined. The achievement to date has been
impressive, and the strong foundation creates a larger potential. It is in
this context and spirit that I take up the editorship in succession to Bill
Bytheway. The editorial policy will of course be frequently re-examined
and refined, but neither the editorial board nor I wish to see
the journal's core ambitions and values change. My aims are to help
authors achieve these to an even higher standard, and particularly to
raise the title's reputation for originality, for the quality of the research
that it reports, and for its standards of communication. The goal is to
raise the ‘impact’ of Ageing & Society, in citation indicators and, more
importantly, in its contributions to understanding and to the formation
of opinion and policy.