In this article, the authors define some of the most evident features of
globalisation from below, which they distinguish from hegemonic globalisation, and draw
out its implications for adult education. They draw out the implications for European adult
education that emerge from the different features of these two types of globalisations. They
then refer to the history of and contemporary provision in adult education in southern
Europe and argue that there are elements there that can serve the purpose of a revitalised
counter-hegemonic adult education approach. They then explore whether this thinking
makes its presence felt in two major European documents, the EU Memorandum on
Lifelong Learning and a recent report on adult education, carried out for the European
Commission, provided by the European Association for the Education of Adults. They do
this given that the international literature on adult education is dominated by ideas and
experiences emerging from the central European states and Nordic countries. They highlight
the recurrence in the Memorandum of the tendency to vocationalise adult education at
different stages of a person’s life. They consider the EAEA report to be more expansive and
representative than the Memorandum but they also argue that there is a tendency to
uncritically accept the vocationalisation of older adulthood. The issue of migration from
south-of-the-equator populations to Europe, and especially southern Europe, is also
considered, given that it is a prominent feature of the intensification of globalisation. Its
implications for adult education practice are also considered, also and mainly in light of the
situation obtaining in the frontier countries of southern Europe.peer-reviewe
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