Lifelong Learning in the Context of the European Area of Lifelong Learning (original) (raw)

2011, RUSC. Universities and Knowledge Society Journal

The importance of lifelong learning is beyond question in any working context and especially so under the circumstances of today's global recession. Consequently, in the current European Higher Education Area (EHEA), continuing education tendencies and plans acquire a global dimension that overcomes-or should overcome-reductionist approaches. The construction and development of the European Area of lifelong learning (EAll) (Commission of the European Communities, 2001a), should be understood as a process that is embedded in a much broader framework. It is a networked action in which the involvement of many active professional stakeholders is required, and in which convergence, recognition and cohesion are the principal qualitative components. Following an exhaustive review of original and official documents linked to the origin, foundations and construction of the EHEA, the EAll stands out as a challenge within the context of the EHEA as a whole. In the aforementioned review, lifelong learning is conceived on the basis of the free