Abstract

In this paper, I describe our ongoing international project in engaged educational ethnography and participatory action research with young adults and consider its relevance for a discussion on the community-building role of adult education in a globalized context. I use the example of our case study to suggest that adult educators can generate viable communities by creating learning spaces that nurture critical consciousness, a sense of agency, participation and social solidarity among internationally and culturally diverse young adult learners. Furthermore, I argue that participation in international learning communities formed through this educational process can potentially help young adults become locally and globally engaged citizens. International learning communities for global citizenship thus present a proposition for conceptualizing the vital role of adult community education in supporting democratic global and local citizenship in a world defined in terms of cross-cultural and longdistance encounters in the formation of culture.

Highlights

  • In this paper, I take a position on the central theme of this special issue of RELA, whose editors invite discussion around two divergent orientations regarding adult education and community building (Wildemeersch & Kurantowicz, 2010)

  • I will support my position through reflection on an ongoing international project in engaged educational ethnography and participatory action research with young adults, which we have been conducting for the last three years in the Polish city of Wrocław

  • We find an overwhelmingly homogenous Catholic, white Polish community which is only slightly becoming to any extent multicultural through ‘expats’ moving to the city on mostly temporary assignments as a part of foreign investment schemes

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Summary

Introduction

I take a position on the central theme of this special issue of RELA, whose editors invite discussion around two divergent orientations regarding adult education and community building (Wildemeersch & Kurantowicz, 2010). I will support my position through reflection on an ongoing international project in engaged educational ethnography and participatory action research with young adults, which we have been conducting for the last three years in the Polish city of Wrocław.

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