Contained in:
Book Chapter

Advocacy, Adult Learning and the Pursuit of Social Justice

  • Alan Tuckett

The chapter highlights the centrality of advocacy work for adult learners, particularly from marginalised and excluded communities, as a key feature of the work of Lalage Bown and its scope nationally and internationally. It explores effective work in representing the experience and demands of adult learners, and those who work with them, undertaken by adult learning associations at a national, regional and global level. The three examples considered are the work of the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE) in England and Wales, notably around the creation of Adult Learners’ Week as festival and advocacy tool; the work of the Asian South Pacific Association for Basic and Adult Education (ASPBAE), in combining research-based policy work and advocacy, regionally and globally alongside developing advocacy skills among its members; and the work of the International Council for Adult Education, the global non-governmental association for adult learning, and the work of its International Academy for Lifelong Learning Advocacy in strengthening practitioners’ capacity to engage with global decision making processes affecting adult learning. The chapter concludes with reflections on the key skills needed for successful advocacy.

  • Keywords:
  • Adult Learning,
  • Advocacy,
  • Associations,
  • Equity,
+ Show More

Alan Tuckett

University of Wolverhampton, United Kingdom - ORCID: 0000-0001-7475-4727

  1. ASPBAE. 2010. ASPBAE Activity Report 2010. Mumbai: ASPBAE.
  2. ASPBAE. 2014. ASPBAE: Learning Beyond Boundaries. Mumbai: ASPBAE.
  3. Bhola, Harbans S. 1997. “Transnational Forces and National Realities of Adult Basic Education and Training.” Convergence 30 (2-3): 41-50.
  4. Bochynek, Bettina, edited by. 2007. Beating the Drums for Attention. Proceedings and Outcomes of the Socrates/Grundtvig Network ‘International Adult Learners Week inEurope’ (IntALWinE). Hamburg: UNESCO Institute of Lifelong Learning.
  5. Bown, Lalage. 2000. “Lifelong Learning: Ideas and Achievements at the Threshold of the Twenty-first Century.” Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education 30 (3): 341-51.
  6. Castillo, Raquel. 2012. “Enabling South-South and Triangular Cooperation among Civil Society Organisations: The ASPBAE Experience.” Adult Education and Development 72: 41-53.
  7. Centenary Commission on Adult Education. 2019. ‘A Permanent National Necessity…’. Adult Education and Lifelong Learning for 21st Century Britain. Nottingham: University of Nottingham.
  8. Clover, Darlene. 1995. “Learning for Environmental Action: Building International Consensus.” In Adult Education through World Collaboration, edited by Beverly B. Cassara, 219-30. Melbourne: Krieger.
  9. Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (DANIDA). 1999. DANIDA-SIDA Joint Donor Review of ICAE, International Council for Adult Education, Final Report. Copenhagen: DANIDA.
  10. Duke, Chris. 2003. “DVV and ASPBAE – the Early Years.” Adult Education and Development 60: 83-90.
  11. Ellis, Patricia. 1995. “Women’s Education: Challenges to the Adult Education Movement.” In Adult Education through World Collaboration, edited by Beverly B. Cassara, 239-45. Melbourne: Krieger.
  12. Fullick, Leisha. 2010. “NIACE: Policy, Politics and Campaigning 1988-2008.” In Remaking Adult Learning, edited by Jay Derrick, Ursula Howard, John Field, Peter Lavender, Sue Meyer, Ekkehard N. von Rein, and Tom Schuller, 201-14. London-Leicester: IOE-NIACE.
  13. Gilbert, Howard, and Helen Prew, edited by. 2001. A Passion for Learning: Celebrating 80 Years of NIACE Support for Adult Learning. Leicester: NIACE.
  14. Global Education Monitoring Report Team. 2015. Education for All 2000-2025: Achievements and Challenges; EFA Monitoring Report 2015. Paris: UNESCO/GEM.
  15. Grover, Derek. 2006. More Than a Language: NIACE Committee of Inquiry on English for Speakers of Other Languages. Leicester: NIACE.
  16. Hall, Budd. 1995. “Growing a Global Learning Network.” In Adult Education through World Collaboration, edited by Beverly B. Cassara, 187-210. Melbourne: Krieger.
  17. Hinzen, Heribert. 2006. “The Links between Julius K. Nyerere and the ICAE: From the First World Assembly in 1976 in Dar es Salaam to the Next in 2007 in Nairobi.” Adult Education and Development 67: 69-76.
  18. ICAE. 2003. Agenda for the Future: Six Years Later. Montevideo: ICAE.
  19. International Civil Society Forum FISC. 2010. “From Rhetoric to Coherent Action.” Adult Education and Development 75. <https://www.dvv-international.de/en/adult-education-and-development/editions/aed-752010/preparatory-process-of-icae-and-fisc/from-rhetoric-to-coherent-action> (2023-07-01).
  20. Kekkonen, Helena. 1995. “Adult Education for Peace.” In Adult Education through World Collaboration, edited by Beverly B. Cassara, 211-18. Melbourne: Krieger.
  21. Khan, Maria L.A. 2000. “Does EFA stand for ‘Except for Adults’.” ICAE News, 8. Toronto: ICAE.
  22. Khan, Maria L.A. 2014. “Daring to Persist: ASPBAE @50.” Adult Education and Development 72. <https://www.dvv-international.de/en/adult-education-and-development/editions/aed-792012/networking/daring-to-persist-aspbae-50> (2023-07-01).
  23. Morris, Roger. 2011. “Arnold Hely and Australian Adult Education.” Australian Journal of Adult Learning 51: 192-204.
  24. Rodney, Patricia. 1995. “History and Development of the ICAE Literacy Program.” In Adult Education through World Collaboration, edited by Beverly B. Cassara, 231-38. Melbourne: Krieger.
  25. Schuller, Tom, and David Watson. 2009. Learning through Life. Leicester: NIACE.
  26. Tuckett, Alan. 1996. “Scrambled Eggs: Social Policy and Adult Learning.” In The Learning Society, edited by Peter Raggatt, and Richard Edwards, 45-58. Milton Keynes: Open University.
  27. Tuckett, Alan. 2009. “The Role of Non-government Organisations and Networks.” In The Routledge International Handbook of Lifelong Learning, edited by Peter Jarvis, 323-31. Abingdon: Routledge.
  28. Tuckett, Alan. 2015. “The Contribution of ICAE to the Development of a Global Lifelong Learning Agenda.” In Adult Education in an Interconnected World, edited by Uwe Gartenschlaeger, and Esther Hirsch, 25-33. Bonn: DVV-I.
  29. Tuckett, Alan. 2021. “Adult Education for a Change: Advocacy, Learning Festivals, Migration, and the Pursuit of Equity and Social Justice.” Journal of Adult and Continuing Education 27 (1): 121-35.
  30. UNESCO. 1997. Adult Education: The Hamburg Declaration. The Agenda for the Future. Hamburg: UIL.
  31. United Nations. 2015. Transforming the World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. New York: UN.
  32. Yarnit, Martin. 2010. “Adult Learners’ Week: 20 Years On.” In Remaking Adult Learning, edited by Jay Derrick, Ursula Howard, John Field, Peter Lavender, Sue Meyer, Ekkehard N. von Rein, and Tom Schuller, 113-27. London-Leicester: IOE-NIACE.
PDF
  • Publication Year: 2023
  • Pages: 79-92
  • Content License: CC BY 4.0
  • © 2023 Author(s)

XML
  • Publication Year: 2023
  • Content License: CC BY 4.0
  • © 2023 Author(s)

Chapter Information

Chapter Title

Advocacy, Adult Learning and the Pursuit of Social Justice

Authors

Alan Tuckett

Language

English

DOI

10.36253/979-12-215-0253-4.11

Peer Reviewed

Publication Year

2023

Copyright Information

© 2023 Author(s)

Content License

CC BY 4.0

Metadata License

CC0 1.0

Bibliographic Information

Book Title

Adult Education and Social Justice: International Perspectives

Editors

Maria Slowey, Heribert Hinzen, Michael Omolewa, Michael Osborne

Peer Reviewed

Number of Pages

324

Publication Year

2023

Copyright Information

© 2023 Author(s)

Content License

CC BY 4.0

Metadata License

CC0 1.0

Publisher Name

Firenze University Press

DOI

10.36253/979-12-215-0253-4

ISBN Print

979-12-215-0252-7

eISBN (pdf)

979-12-215-0253-4

eISBN (xml)

979-12-215-0254-1

Series Title

Studies on Adult Learning and Education

Series ISSN

2704-596X

Series E-ISSN

2704-5781

103

Fulltext
downloads

114

Views

Export Citation

1,347

Open Access Books

in the Catalogue

2,262

Book Chapters

3,790,127

Fulltext
downloads

4,421

Authors

from 923 Research Institutions

of 65 Nations

65

scientific boards

from 348 Research Institutions

of 43 Nations

1,248

Referees

from 380 Research Institutions

of 38 Nations