Call for papers: Perspectives on Workers’ Education, ELHN 2026
Call for papers for the working group Workers’ Education, European Labour History
Network’s Conference, June 16-19, 2026, Barcelona
Deadline for abstracts: 1 August 2025
Early on, workers' education was organised by and for the working class and served
multiple purposes. Workers’ education aimed to compensate for the limited formal education
available to many workers. In such contexts, workers’ education was a bridge to higher
education and a pathway to upward social mobility. Workers’ education also became a means
for the cultural empowerment of the working class. Importantly, workers’ education also
constituted the institutional foundation for the political education of the working class.
These programs ensured members had the skills to manage organisations, represent labour
parties in parliamentary institutions, and engage meaningfully with ideological debates.
While the structure and goals of such educational initiatives have varied between
countries, many formats have been used, including labour colleges, folk high schools,
study circles, lectures, and correspondence courses.
Because workers’ education has diverse aims, the educational sphere within the labour
movement has often been marked by conflict. Different branches of the movement have
competed for control over workers’ education institutions, bourgeois forces have attempted
to curtail or co-opt these efforts, and funding has frequently been a source of
contention.
In these sessions, we aim to explore educational practices, teaching methods, and the
cultural and political significance of workers' education. We welcome contributions
from various disciplines, including case studies and comparative analyses. Papers may
examine workers’ education in different national contexts.
We particularly welcome papers that address:
* Conflicts surrounding workers’ education, such as tensions between factions within
the labour movement or between labour organisations and the state
* The funding and financial organisation of workers’ education
* Influential individuals who played a key role in advancing workers’ education
We especially encourage contributions that approach workers’ education from a gender
perspective.
________________________________________
Coordinators
Elina Hakoniemi, University of Helsinki
Jenny Jansson, Uppsala University
Jonas Söderqvist, Swedish Labour Movement Archives and Library
Please send abstracts and a short bio to Jenny Jansson
(jenny.jansson@statsvet.uu.se<mailto:jenny.jansson@statsvet.uu.se>) by 1 August
2025.
Show replies by date