Research Circle

Raymond Williams Foundation Partnership with RED PEPPER

RWF has entered into a partnership with Red Pepper magazine. In the new partnership the Red Pepper website will host a ‘Raymond Williams’ section that brings together the Keywords series and other articles, links to the RWF’s website, and updates with details of the RWF grant cycle. In the next print edition of RP coming out shortly (Spring 2026) there will be an announcement of the partnership, background on RP’s links with Raymond Williams, and some context/introduction to RWF’s work and this will be supported by an initial scene-setting article on the current state of adult learning,

Celebrating Resources of Hope: The Story and Place of a Research Circle

Since Spring 2021, we have convened a research circle on ‘Building community, democracy and dialogue through adult lifelong education’ and organised a series of events to challenge dominant perspectives on lifelong learning. The Circle is made up of around 10 active members, drawn from backgrounds in adult, further and higher education, the voluntary and community sector and trade union education in different regions of the UK. We all have a deep commitment to social purpose education and our objective has been the sharing of experience and critical engagement, designed to explore and generate new and existing forms of practice in the generation of hope. Our activities form part of the continuing work of The Centenary Commission on Adult Education in the UK.

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Celebrating Resources of Hope: Community, democracy & dialogue through adult lifelong education

The first of the Centenary Commission Research Circle’s conferences on ‘Building community, democracy & dialogue through adult lifelong education‘ was held on 7 May, focussing on the theme of ‘Community, democracy and dialogue through adult lifelong education: Celebrating Resources of Hope’.

Organised by Sharon Clancy, Iain Jones, and other members of the research circle on fostering community, democracy and dialogue, it was the first in a series of three events which provide opportunities to learn about existing practices, and to meet and think about different forms of democratic adult education and imagine new forms of critical engagement.

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