, an ESRC led, cross research council programme on ageing in Britain. The programme is a unique collaboration between five UK Research Councils - ESRC, EPSRC, BBSRC, MRC and AHRC - and is the largest and most ambitious research programme on ageing ever mounted in the UK. Within this programme, the particular project that we are pursuing is a multidisciplinary research initiative with the ultimate aim of improving quality of life of older people in rural South West England and Wales. The theoretical framework that integrates seven research strands concerns the notion of ‘connectivity’ and older peoples’ engagement with civic society. CQR staff are involved in two strands of the project. Dr Kip Jones is leading a project which uses narrated biographies to examine how older people experience connectivity, rural place and space, and identity. The study focuses on the experiences and perceptions of rural living among older residents, in particular, those whose lifestyles may not fit existing community norms and/or remain invisible and disconnected. Accounts of the life stories of gay and lesbian older adults who live in remote rural areas will form the basis of a script for a professional level film. In a second study, Professors Kate Galvin and Les Todres are developing a new theory of well-being in order to better understand the mobility experiences of older people, and how this impacts on their quality of life. They are using some innovative modifications of a phenomenological approach in order to address quality of life issues in new ways.