Why Enrol in a Lifelong Learning Programme? A Comparative Study of Austrian and Spanish Young Adults
Metadatos
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Cogitatio Press
Materia
Education Employability Learning programmes Life course Lifelong learning Young adults
Fecha
2019-09-05Referencia bibliográfica
Barroso-Hurtado, D., & Chan, R. (2019). Why enrol in a lifelong learning programme? A comparative study of Austrian and Spanish young adults. Social Inclusion, 7(3), 110-121.
Patrocinador
This article is based on a research project (YOUNG_ADULLLT) funded by the EU’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, Contract Number 693167. Open access funding provided by the University of Vienna.Resumen
Lifelong learning (LLL) programmes can be perceived as a means of governing youth transitions. Young adults can use such
programmes to try to overcome different constraints in their life course. This article explores the decisions of young adults
in Vienna (Austria) and Malaga (Spain) who are participating in different LLL programmes that seek to address their transition
from unemployment to employment. In order to understand these decisions, we want to explore: (1) how the young
adult’s experiences influenced their decision to engage with an LLL programme, (2) what role these programmes played in
their biographies and (3) how young adults imagine their future. We use two theoretical lenses to explore these questions:
bounded agency and projectivity. A comparative study of these two regions provides insight into how different contextual
conditions influence young adults’ decisions. We perform three different analyses: of the young people’s past trajectories
and transitions, of their imagined futures, and of their decision to enrol in the programme. Exploring young people’s subjective
accounts of their pasts and their imagined futures helps to improve our understanding of the role young people
believe these programmes play in their lives, why they have decided to enrol in them, and how they use and interpret
these pathways through, and in the framework of, different contextual conditions.





